The Poets and Poetry of Cecil County, Maryland Part 19

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Mr. Cooley's widow and son, Marvin L. Cooley, still survive, and at present reside in Darlington.

A STORY WITH A MORAL.

One ev'ning, as some children play'd Beneath an oak tree's summer shade, A stranger, travel-stained and gray, Beside them halted on his way.

As if a spell, upon them thrown, Had changed their agile limbs to stone, Each in the spot where it first view'd Th' approaching wand'rer mutely stood.

Ere silence had oppressive grown The old man's voice thus found a tone; "I too was once as blithe and gay-- My days as lightly flew away As if I counted all their hours Upon a dial-plate of flowers; And gentle slumber oft renew'd The joyance of my waking mood, As if my soul in slumber caught The radiance of expiring thought; As if perception's farewell beam Could tinge my bosom with a dream-- That twilight of the mind which throws Such mystic splendor o'er repose.



Contrasted with a youth so bright My manhood seems one dreary night, A chilling, cheerless night, like those Which over Arctic regions close.

I married one, to my fond eyes An angel draped in human guise.

Alas! she had one failing; No secret could she keep In spite of all my railing, And curses loud and deep.

No matter what the danger Of gossiping might be, She'd gossip with a stranger As quickly as with me.

One can't be always serious, And talking just for show, For that is deleterious To fellows.h.i.+p, and so I oft with her would chatter, Just as I felt inclined, Of any little matter I chanced to call to mind.

Alas! on one ill-fated day, I heard an angry neighbor say, 'Don't tell John Jones of your affairs, Don't tell him for your life, Without you wish the world to know, For he will tell his wife.'

'For he will tell his wife' did ring All day through heart and brain; In sleep a nightmare stole his voice, And shouted it again.

I spent whole days in meditating How I should break the spell, Which made my wife keep prating Of things she shouldn't tell.

Some awful crime I'll improvise, Which I'll to her confide, Upon the instant home I rushed, My hands in blood were dyed.

'Now, Catharine, by your love for me, My secret closely hide.'

Her quiet tongue, for full three days, The secret kept so well, I almost grew to hope that she This secret wouldn't tell.

Alas! upon the following day She had revealed it, for I found Some surly men with warrants arm'd Were slyly lurking round.

They took me to the county jail My tristful Kate pursuing, And all the way she sobb'd and cried 'Oh! what have I been doing?'

Before the judge I was arraigned, Who sternly frowning gazed on me, And by his clerk straightway inquired, What was the felon's plea.

May't please your honor, I exclaim'd This case you may dismiss-- Now hearken all a.s.sembled here, My whole defence is this: I killed a dog--a thievish wretch-- His body may be found, Beneath an apple tree of mine, A few feet under ground, This simple plot I laid in hope To cure my tattling wife; I find, alas! that she must talk, Though talking risk my life.

So from her presence then I fled, In spite of all the tears she shed, And since, a wand'ring life I've led, And told the tale where'er I sped."

FORTY YEARS AFTER.

For twenty guests the feast is laid With luscious wines and viands rare, And perfumes such as might persuade The very G.o.ds to revel there.

A youthful company gathered here, Just two score years ago to-day, Agreed to meet once ev'ry year Until the last one pa.s.sed away.

And when the group might fewer grow The vacant chairs should still be placed Around the board whereon should glow The glories of the earliest feast.

One guest was there, with sunken eye And mem'ry busy with the past-- Could he have chosen the time to die, Some earlier feast had been his last.

"But thrice we met" the old man said, But thrice in youthful joy and pride, When all for whom this board was spread Were seated gaily at my side.

Then first we placed an empty chair And ev'ry breast was filled with gloom, For he we knew, who should be there, That hour was absent in the tomb.

The jest and song were check'd awhile, But quickly we forgot the dead, And o'er each face th' arrested smile In all its former freedom spread.

For still our circle seem'd intact.

The lofty chorus rose as well As when our numbers had not lack'd That voice the more in mirth to swell.

But we parted with a sadder mien And hands were clasped more kindly then, For each one knew where death had been We might expect him o'er again.

Ah! wondrous soon our feast before A lessening group was yearly spread, And all our joys were ruffled o'er With somber mem'ries of the dead.

The song and jest less rude became, Our voices low and looks more kind, Each toast recall'd some cherish'd name Or brought a buried friend to mind.

At length, alas! we were but two With features shrivel'd, shrunk, and changed, Whose faded eyes could scarcely view The vacant seats around us ranged.

But fancy, as we pa.s.sed the bowl, Fill'd ev'ry empty chair again.

Inform'd the silent air with soul And shaped the shadowy void to men.

The breezy air around us stirr'd With s.n.a.t.c.hes of familiar song, Nor cared we then how fancy err'd Since her delusion made us strong.

But now, I am the only guest, The grave--the grave now covers all Who joined me at the annual feast We kept in this deserted hall.

He paused and then his goblet fill'd, But never touch'd his lips the brim, His arm was stay'd, his pulses still'd, And ah! his glazing eyes grew dim.

The farther objects in the room Have vanish'd from his failing sight; One broad horizon spreads in gloom Around a lessening disc of light.

And then he seem'd like one who kept A vigil with suspended breath-- So kindly to his breast had crept Some gentlest messenger of death.

THE PAST.

Still--still the Earth each primal grace renews, And blooms, or brightens with Creation's hues: Repeats the sun the glories of the sky, Which upward lured the earliest watcher's eye; Yet bids his beams the glowing clouds adorn With all the charms of Earth's initial morn, And duplicates at eve the splendors yet That fixed the glance, that first beheld him set.

LOVED AND LOST.

Love cannot call her back again, But oh! it may presume With ceaseless accents to complain, All wildly near her tomb.

A madd'ning mirage of the mind Still bids her image rise, That form my heart can never find Yet haunts my wearied eyes.

Since Earth received its earliest dead, Man's sorrow has been vain; Though useless were the tears they shed, Still I will weep again.

The breast, that may its pangs conceal, Is not from torture freed, For still the wound, that will not heal, Alas! must inly bleed.

Vain Sophist! ask no reason why The love that cannot save, Will hover with despairing cry Around the dear ones grave.

Mine is not frenzy's sudden gust, The pa.s.sion of an hour, Which sprinkles o'er beloved dust Its brief though burning shower.

Then bid not me my tears to check, The effort would but fail, The face, I hid at custom's beck, Would weep behind its veil.

The tree its blighted trunk will rear, With sap and verdure gone, And hearts may break, yet many a year All brokenly live on.

Earth has no terror like the tomb Which hides my darling's head, Yet seeking her amid its gloom, I grope among the dead.

And oh! could love restore that form To its recovered grace, How soon would it again grow warm Within my wild embrace.

The Poets and Poetry of Cecil County, Maryland Part 19

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