Classic and Contemporary Poetry
FUNERAL OF MAZEEN; THE LAST OF THE ... MOHEGAN NATION, by LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Mid the trodden turf is an open grave Last Line: And plead for your pale-brow'd brother's guilt. Subject(s): Funerals; Hope; Native Americans; Sin; Soul; Burials; Optimism; Indians Of America; American Indians; Indians Of South America | ||||||||
'MID the trodden turf is an open grave, And a funeral train where the wild flowers wave, And a manly sleeper doth seek his bed In the narrow house of the sacred dead, Yet the soil hath scantily drank of the tear, For the red-brow'd few are the mourners here. They have lower'd the prince to his resting spot, The deep prayer hath swell'd, but they heed it not, Their abject thoughts 'mid his ashes grope, And quench'd in their souls is the light of hope; Know ye their pangs, who turn away The vassal foot from a monarch's clay? With the dust of kings in this noteless shade, The last of a royal line is laid, In whose stormy veins that current roll'd Which curb'd the chief and the warrior bold; Yet pride still burns in their humid clay, Though the pomp of the sceptre hath pass'd away. They spake, and the war-dance wheel'd its round, Or the wretch to the torturing stake was bound; They lifted their hand, and the eagle fell From his sunward flight, or his cloud-wrapt cell; They frown'd, and the tempest of battle arose, And streams were stain'd with the blood of foes. Be silent, O Grave! o'er thy hoarded trust, And smother the voice of the royal dust; The ancient pomp of their council-fires, Their simple trust in our pilgrim sires, The wiles that blasted their withering race, Hide, hide them deep in thy darkest place. Till the rending caverns shall yield their dead, Till the skies as a burning scroll are red, Till the wondering slave from his chain shall spring, And to falling mountains the tyrant cling, Bid all their woes with their relics rest And bury their wrongs in thy secret breast. But, when aroused at the trump of doom, Ye shall start, bold kings, from your lowly tomb, When some bright-wing'd seraph of mercy shall bend Your stranger eye on the Sinner's Friend, Kneel, kneel, at His throne whose blood was spilt, And plead for your pale-brow'd brother's guilt. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE OLD INDIAN by ARTHUR STANLEY BOURINOT SCHOLARLY PROCEDURE by JOSEPHINE MILES ONE LAST DRAW OF THE PIPE by PAUL MULDOON THE INDIANS ON ALCATRAZ by PAUL MULDOON PARAGRAPHS: 9 by HAYDEN CARRUTH THEY ACCUSE ME OF NOT TALKING by HAYDEN CARRUTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART: FORM AND TRADITION by DIANE DI PRIMA COLUMBUS [JANUARY, 1487] by LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY |
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