UBRJJtf OF CONGSJISS POEMS. POEMS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS. BY g/ WALKER, AUTHOR OF THE VAGABOND, THREE Nil dictum, quod r.os dictum prius. PHILADELPHIA ■ PRINTED BY THO. L. PLOWMAN- 1804. Is 4 V3 PREFACE. WITIIO UT patronage, 'without the en- treaty of friends, or the expectation of fame, it may be difficult to assign a reason for the most daring of all hazards in the Literary world ; the publication of a volume of Poems. To say that the vanity of fame can be wholly discarded from the mind of any Au- thor, is perhaps saying too much: but when ive refect on the transcience of all human af- fairs, the destruction of the most mighty em- pires, and particularly the momentary exist- ence of any living language, (insomuch that writers of 400 years past are scarce intelligi- ble to common readers of the present day) O VI the man who rests his reward upon fame, builds upon a foundation that has already -va- nished beneath his feet. Shall the writer of trifles class himself •with 7ixilto?i, or with Pope? Yet the day will come, when Milton's language will be obso- lete, and the numbers of Pope lose their sound. It is frequently the fortune of Po- tts who write for fame, to be known no far- ther than the narrow circle of their friends. With bounds so circumscribed as these, it would be easy to be content, were it not for the refection that every year is diminishing tanaer, and snatching some one from life, whom we might have wished to enter- tain or desired to please. What then re- mains of a private nature to give pleasure to the mind ? It is sure not the hopes of praise Vll from contemporaries, since the danger of condemnation is more than an equal hazard : it is sure not the expectation of a trifing pecuniary emolument, since more might cer- tainly be acquired by the meanest mechanical employment in an equal time : it must then be from that certain tincture of indefinable madness which stimulates Poets to commit their dreams to paper, and compels author's, against their cool judgment, to publish. For the Poems themselves I shall offer no apology. Criticism, if it be judicious, is al- ways desirable : if it be cynical, it but ex- cites in me a smile ; because I know the judgment of the Public is rarely influenced by those who are themselves ashamed to ap- pear ; and because I have experienced, that criticisms dictated by malice, and embellished Vlll by falsehood, have sunk harmless into obli- vion, if not called into public notice by the •wounded feelings of the author. I am ready to acknowledge that the Jour- ney of a Day, is far from equal to Dr. John- sort's inimitable tale in the Rambler ; but it may not be unpleasing hi a form which is more impressive to the memory. In the other pieces, the manners and idiom of the East are endeavoured to be expressed ; and though they are not given to the Public as translations, I fatter myself they may be re- ceived as a specimen of Oriental sentiment in English attire. The Bedouin Love Song was suggested by a passage in Volney's Tra- vels. The Ode of Hafez is from a prose translation in Jones's Poems. IX In the American Eclogues i" have taken a poetic licence of exaggerating the picture of a Planter' s felicity ; human life being near- ly equipoised in civil society, though Poets, Philosophers, and Divines are allowed to em- bellish themes of rural and retired pleasures* The Odes descriptive of ancient JYorthern opinions and manners are chiefly taken from Mallet's Antiquities ; they are curious as re- lating to our ancestors, and may perhaps ex- cite some one to inquire farther into their remote and singular history : Poetry would there find herself gratified, Romance might read her origin, and superstition might wan- der in a labyrinth congenial to herself. The remaining pieces are of a miscellane- ous nature. Many that I have written I have suppressed for their puerility ; and ma- ny that I have retained might possibly have been with more propriety destroyed. I will venture to say> no one will ever find so much pleasure in their perusal, as I have received in their composition. OBIDAH, THE JOURNEY OF A DAY. ■Time, Morning. THRO' Hindo's plains, abroad at early day, Obidah journey'd on his length'ning way : Refresh'd with rest, gay hope his speed advanc'd, As o'er the green his footsteps lightly danc'd. The morning song of paradisial birds Mingled with lowing sound of distant herds : The fluttering breeze effusive spices shed, And dewy odours fann'd him as they fled. The towering oak, the forest's hoary king } The primrose, humble herald of the spring, Ry turns engaged, as grateful fancy view'd : And charm'd the rigors of the road pursued. Onward he went, till high the mid-day sun, In blazing splendor half his course had run ; And thirst, fatiguing, taught his feet to stray, Where nodding groves held out a fairer way ; 12 The sultry vapours cool'd amidst the shade ; Fresh, flowery verdure bloom'd along the glade : The devious path, inviting, seem'd to lead In equal windings, and with equal speed : Thus business might with pleasure be combin'd, And labour's gifts acquir'd with peace of mind. Obidah on, with ardent footsteps press'd The spreading turf; nor stay 'd his speed to rest, Except where matted trees impervious flung Inviting shades, where golden linnets sung, Or where the luscious grape purpurial grew, Or creeping melon of cameleonhue, Or fragrant flowers held out alluring sweets, To stay the fervour of the noontide heats. The path at length new involutions took, Diverging gently to a distant brook, Midst winding cliffs, by hanging thickets crown'd, And fountains murmur'd in the shades around. Here paus'd Obidah, cautious, on his way, Lest tracts like these should tempt his feet to stray. But now he knew the plain breath 'd subtle fire, And parching sun-beams scatter'd fierce their ire. The path before him might evolving lead, With equal ending, tho' with varied speed. 13 In ease confirm'd, yet still with doubting mind He forward press'd ; or, careless, lagg'd behind — His doubts to charm, he mounted every hill, Then turning, listen'd to the tinkling rill ; Or stopp'd to mark the spangling fountains play, Or caught the echoes ere they died away ; Or from some height the meandering river trac'd To distant regions, through a flowery waste. Uncounted, thus the hours light pinion'd flew, And volant fancy skipp'd from view to view : Till lost, bewilder'd in a doubtful maze, Confus'd, nor this, nor that, the road displays. Then paus'd Obidah, pensive and aghast, Aware the time of loitering now was past. While thus he stood, in anxious fear perplex'd, And to the coming night new fears annex'd ; Black grew the heavens, with labouring clouds o'er- spread ; The muttering thunders broke around his head. Regretting now (when each regret was vain) The childish ease which drew him from the plain; Where, tho' no verdant pleasures gaily smil'd, The road uneven, and the prospect wild, It led to Delhi, where he hop'd to know Joys, such as friendship, love, and home bestow. u He turn'd, to tread again the mazy ground, If no near opening to the plain were found. But first, in lowly suppliance press'd the earth To Him obedient, who gave Nature birth. Then calm, confiding rose, and, nndismay'd, Drew forth his polish 'd sabre's shining blade, For now was heard the fierce hyena's howl, The lions roaring, and the tyger's growl : Expiring victims shrieking in despair, And savage rapine rent the tortur'd air. Loud roar'd the winds, low bow'd the forest's pride, Thunders deep echoed from the mountain's side : Lightnings sulphureous thro' the darkness gleam'd, Descending rains in hissing torrents stream'd. Black swelled the floods, wide o'er their straiten'd bed, In tumbling horror, from the mountain's head ; And wild destruction thro' the vallies hurl'd, Like parting floodgates on a deluged world. Forlorn, thro' wilds, by angry Nature press'd, Obidah sought, but found no place for rest : His trembling knees their labour then deny, His breath grew short, or heaved a deepening sigh ; His fainting sight refused to point the way, And night surcharg'd his soul in grim array. 15 Resign'd, and yielding to his fearful doom, A distant taper glimmer'd thro' the gloom. With faltering pace, thro' tangled brambles torn, Thro' rattan pailings, shrubb'd with prickly thorn. The youth espied an humble dwelling reared, Whose sheltering roof his dreary prospect cheer'd. With suppliant voice he claim'd the stranger's right, And gain'd admission from the howling night. With smiles the ancient host receiv'd his guest ; Now dried his garments, now his hunger press'd. The roasted plantain with rich figs supplied, And milk of cocoa in delectuous tide. Obidah, grateful, nature's wants assuaged, When thus the Dervise all his thoughts engaged. " Say, wandering youth, what chance thy steps hath led. Where beasts alone the secret forest tread, Where twenty years have roll'd their circuit by, Since man's fair image stood before mine eye ? With downward look Obidah then reveal'd. His vagrant folly, nor his fault conceal'd. Again the Dervise, with persuasive tongue, And kindest accents, to advise begun. 16 " My son, from follies past, from dangers o'er, We learn experience, and we stray no more ; — Life's varied round, commix'd of sad and gay, Is but the journey of a summer's day. We rise at morn — when youth with ardor fir'd, Pursues with vigour what is most admir'd : Grasps each gay vision as it onward plays, Nor from the path of Truth and Virtue strays. In time relaxing, as we wish to share With mirth and folly half our load of care ; At distant crime no more we gaze as such, But eager grasp what once we fear'd to touch : Thus led to shades, where ease desidious strays, And soft repose its varied charms displays ; The yielding heart beats high with new delight, And secret wishes prompt where joys invite. We hope at first to taste, and then retire, But still insatiate, want succeeds desire : Temptation only to temptation leads ; And new compliance to the last succeeds. Entranc'd in pleasure's fascinating toils, The heart from bashful innocence recoils ; To drown remorse, we drain the sensual bowl, And with mad riot taint the virgin soul. Thus age creeps o'er us with his mantle, night, Or quick disease arrests with sudden blight — 17 Then stung with horror, we repent in pain, And wish and weep, and weep and wish in vain : For who once stray 'd from Reason's proper bound, Ere to return, the heaven-born courage found? Thrice happy they, who learn from thee, my son, When strength is wasted, and when day is done, That yet some effort, if sincerely made, Propitiating heaven may kindly aid. Go now, dear youth, this night repose in peace, Nor let thy trust in Alia never cease : And when the morning sun impearls the dew, Thy journey aad thy life begin anew." 18 KEBIR, OR THE SCHEICK OF GEZIRA. AN EASTERN ECLOGUE. Time, Evening. BESIDE the tents, where shepherds watch their sheep, Where broken cliffs o'erhang the headlong steep : The peasants sat, while gentle Kebir sung His fate, a warning to the proud and young. What time, the southern winds refresh the air, And chanters to the minarets repair : What time, the sun descends the western sky, And one blue expanse meets the ravish'deye. I, Kebir, on my terrace proudly stood, Lowly beneath me Tigris roll'd her flood : With power inebriate, and with pomp elate, Myself I deem'd the Lord of man and fate. 19 Then thus I said — 'TwasI this palace rais'd, At whose high domes the traveller stands amaz'd, Whose glittering crescents stream with silver bright, And on the moon reflect a fairer light. Where sands eternal spread a desart wild, I spake the word, and verdant gardens smil'd ; I bade exultance from destruction flow ; I taught the shepherds other sounds than woe : Before my face grim war and rapine fled, And pale-fac'd crime alone had cause for dread. The fields rejoicing wave with rustling corn, The scarlet nopals* shine where grew the thorn ; The fleecy almond, and the opium gay, With choicest store their labouring owners pay. Where pleasant pastures bloom perpetual spring, Exulting people tend their flocks and sing. No more the Tartar dares with savage hand Destroy the harvest, desolate the land : Secure at home, the man who sows may reap, And each beneath his date tree safely sleep. No tyrant's power shall blast the virgin's prime, Like early blossoms, shed before their time. * Nopal is the tree upon which the cochineal in- sect exists. 20 Then rest thee, Kebir, thine the gifts of peace, The smiles of love, and nature's rich increase. For me, profusive Tigris spreads her waves, ■Enamel'd verdure follows where she laves ; Majestic swans their silver plumage play, Expand their wings, and cleave the watery way. My groves perennial blush with silken store, And in my garners all their fruitage pour. Delectuous Keuraf paints with various dies Its downy blossoms, that perfume the skies. The purple balsam glows beneath the shade, By bending vines, and thickset citrons made. A thousand fruits, a thousand flowers bestow, The numerous tints that tinge the sapphire bow ; When softest showers distil at early spring, And listening birds take up the note and sing. Whene'er I wish, beneath die balmy grove, To seek kind ease, or indolently rove ; The blushing fruits salute my wanton hand, Impatient flowers their opening leaves expand. f Keura produces flowers of a soft delicious smell, in great esteem in Arabia. On halloxvdays they are used as chapletsfor the head. — Niebuhr's Travels. 21 Damasca's rose, the Iris stript and gay, Admix'd with violet9 strew my devious way ; The abject melon, and the creeping gourd, More rich than nectar, luscious juice afford. Amidst the shrubs that rise forever green, Snow-drifted fountains variate the scene, Diffusing murmurs on the secret breeze, Soft as the hum of honey-gathering bees : Or scattering coolness, as the breath of morn On temper 'd gales, to shady arbours borne. The Thaer-el-hinds* in golden plumage sing, ^.nd warbling Finches make the vallies ring : While by the steady pool reclin'd, I lie, To watch the falling drops the founts supply. Then rest thee, Kebir, thine the gifts of peace, The smiles of love, and nature's rich increase. For me Zobeide, with virgin blush prepares The spicy sherbet, and my transport shares : With modest smile a tale of love expects, Or points compliance with well-timed rejects. Badoura born, where nature breathes in fire, Unchecked, displays the flights of gay desire ; * A bird peculiar to Arabia, bearing an high price on account of its golden plumage. — Niebuhr. 22 Replete with flames, her purple blood beats high, And kindling glances flash her full dark eye. u Forme the singer tunes the seven-stringed lute, Breathes in soft cadence o'er the sighing flute, Strikes tVie glad timbrel, to whose mirth-born sound Egyptian dancers trip the magic round. All things that please the sense, and yield delight, Crowd to my hand, and my regard invite : Full many a year of health and strength remains, Ere age shall mark my head, or chill my veins. Then rest thee, Kebir, thine the gifts of peace, The smiles of love, and nature's rich increase." I spake — when whirlwinds from the desarts rise, Sands, heap'd mountainous, darken thro' the skies. The trembling towers, in sudden terror shake, The sleeping swains, in wondering anguish wake. Despair impels, and thro' the gloom of night In doabtful horror each begins his flight. Unnerv'd I stand ; to cast a lingering glance, Where rapid mischief moves with bold advance. Uptorn, my shattered groves, in verdant show'r, Shed new destruction in that hapless hour. Wide o'er the plain the winds resistless rend, And scatter'd dwellings in confusion blend : 23 Submerg'd in sand by eddying tempests driven, My gardens fly before the angry heaven. The flowery vallies that so lately smil'd, Now spread a desart to the howling wild : Tumultuous sands, as waves by ocean thrown, Reclaim the cultured pastures for their own. My tottering palace crumbles to the ground, Its guilty splendors scattered wide around. Loud shrieks of anguish pierce the dreadful shade, Groans, and despair, and death, the ear pervade. I saw no more. — The frightful tempest hurl'd Obscure disaster o'er the suffering world ; The calcin'd mists, that suffocating blew, In blasts impetuous, kindled as they flew : I felt the gust sulphureous seize my breath, And sunk midst whirling drifts in partial death. Then learn, ye Persians, that to heaven we owe Those gifts it can withhold, or can bestow j That all possessions are of transient kind. Save steady virtue, and a tranquil mind. 24 THE MAID OF THE HARAM. THY cheerless blank, deep night, so still sur- rounding, Befits the feelings of my troubled soul ; Where varied terrors, every hope confounding, At once my fancy and my will controul. In thy dark bosom would I hide my sorrow, Sit where the sycamore spreads thickest gloom : Weep through the hours until returning morrow, Sickens my senses with its taunting bloom. Where can I hide me — darkest night — say whither ? Cannot thy shades conceal me from the eye Of Him, whose cruel mandate brought me hither Awhile to riot, then to pine and die ? What here can charm, what is there here delightful, Barrier'd around by unrelenting walls ? Guarded by Eunuchs, rough and scowling frightful?— Love takes a figure that the heart appals. 25 Awhile, when beauty on my cheek suffuses, Roses carnated — lilies mild and fair ; Compel'dto joy, when joy my heart refuses, In his caresses I may find a share. But when those roses fade, those lilies drooping, Speak the still sorrow of my anguish 'd heart : Then to his slave (disdain'd) no longer stooping, Shall I receive of any smile apart. Then shall I wander with those maids dejected. Whose pallid cheek, and ever-joyless eye, Tell of their charms, that bloom and fade neglected, With 'ring before the hot-empassioned sigh. Thrice happy they, who love sincere partaking, With some kind partner in a shelter'd cot, Know not the anguish, which my heart is breaking, Snatch 'd from my kindred, by my friends forgot. Happy ye maids who dance in Georgia's pastujes, When whispering eve conveys the conscious tale: Ye never fear the frown of tyrant masters, Hid in the silence of the peaceful vale. 26 Oh ! could I loose me, in these bowers retreating, Ever secluded from unwish'd desires, Then would my bosom cease this flurried beating, Nor ere be warm'd by love's unhallow'd fires. Sigh ye cool breezes, gently stealing over, Rustling the foliage with a chill delight ; Echo in cadence round me seems to hover, Bearing my sorrows thro' the gloom of night. 27 PERSIAN HYMN, TO THE RISING SUM PARENT of light, of life, I see Thy orient rays once more arise : With grateful heart and humble knee, I hail thy entrance to the skies. Seas, earth, and air with life replete, Exist but in thy fructuous light ; Chaos, without thy vital heat, Had slept in sempetemai night. Celestial Power ! through Persia's lands, Unsought, thy choicest gifts diffuse, Throw herbage o'er her burning sands. And in her desarts scatter dews. Let famine fly before thy face, The vineyard and the pasture smile j The locust to the mountains chace, With fruit and grain reward our toil. 28 At thy clear warmth creation blooms, The sterile glebe puts forth fresh flowers ; Embalms the air with choice perfumes, With scented shades, and fragrant bowers. Thy bird, the faithful stork*, shall then Propitious on our huts abide : And Peace shall, with the sons of men, In never fading groves reside. The nightingale shall woo the rose Beneath the mulberry's purple shade ; And where the Tigris softly flows, The idle youth shall court the maid. From morning dawn, from east to west, Throughout the cincture of the sky, Mankind shall in thy beams be blest, Shall happy live, and tranquil die. * The stork is considered as a sacred bird through- out the east. It builds upon the houses of peasants, and is beheld as a fortunate guest. 29 - • ARABIAN MAID'S INVOCATION TO THE MOON. PROPITIOUS moon ! whose peaceful beams O'er Theban desarts stray, Sip at the Nile's prolific streams, Of midst the whirlwinds play, Attend and grant a Virgin's pray'r. Her timid wishes hear : Take my Alcanzor to thy care, His lonely footsteps cheer. Where in the desart dark and wild, He treads the dangerous way, Be thy bright orb his certain guide, Until returning day. From where the sanguine lions prowl, Direct his feet aright : Nor let the fierce hyena's howl Add horrors to the night. Where not a shrub, where not a spire Of grass is seen to grow ; 30 Where nature breathes destructive fire, And where no fountains flow ; Let thy cool influence fresh the air, The spicy breezes bring : And may my lover by thy Care Explore the secret spring. There may he rest on banks of balm, Bask in thy tranquil beam ; The burning thirst within him calm With water frosi the stream. His patient camels round him kneel, Forgetful of their toil, The noon-day heats no more they feel, Nor from their loads recoil. Then shall he gaze with grateful mind Upon thy radiant face : Think on the maid he left behind, And all his steps retrace ; Till lull'd by softest scents, that move On Zephyrs thro' the air, He sinks to sleep, and dreams of love His slumbering visions share. 31 INVOCATION OF THE WEST WIND*. COME western breezes, sweet and airy blow, From beds of spices to my garden come : Where winds Euphrates, solemn, smooth, and slow, Where hyacinths and amaranthus' bloom. Oh ! come and cool this mid-day blaze of heat. Whose arid beams suspend my fainting breath, My spirits sink — or fluttering seem to beat, The certain symptoms of approaching death. Dry is the brook that murmur'd in the glade, The marble fountains shed no pearly dews, The vernal foliage, shrunk, begins to fade, The drooping boughs their wonted gloom refuse. The paroquets hang down the beating head, The drowsy serpents bask along my way, All animation seems for ever fled, And silence, dreary silence, rules the day. * From this little poem the reader may form some idea of the effects of heat in eastern climates. y 32 Exhal'd — the vapours kindle into blaze-, Thro' thinnest aether, stars at noon appear, Save where at distance spreads the dusky haze, Th' approaching herald of the Simoomf near. Death and destruction ride upon the wind, Whose sapphire stream, impregn'd with burning sand, More certain kills than plague with famine join'd : Nor plant, nor breath of life the blast withstand. Inhaling flame, in vain I would assuage The heat, with nect'rous juice of cluster'd vine. But what can stay the sun in zenith rage, When burning winds, and parching sands combine- Come then ye evening breezes, quickly come ! Ye paradisial dews, once more exhale ; Refreshing fragrance, mingled with perfume : Come, bearing life upon the western gale. f Simoom, Samiel or Fire-wind, is destruction to all animal and vegetable life. When a man or samel falls before it, they become instantly livid ; up- on shaking a limb, it separates in the hand. The flesh does notputrify, but is so changed or rarified by ititense heat, that while the outward form remains, a 'man or camel may be easily lifted with one hand. — Ives's Voyage. S3 SONG A PERSIAN MAID. BENEATH the palm-tree let me sit ; Beside the babbling spring, Whose distant murmurs may transmit The name of Him I sing. Whatever land, whatever shore These waves shall chance to beat, Thro' ev'ry desart they explore, His long-lov'd name repeat. To all the maids of Persia's land Shall Oman's name be known ; For as he trod the burning sand, He liv'd for me alone. For me he trac'd the desart drear, For me he bent the bow : But when nor hope, nor help was near, The Tartar laid him low. 34 O ! Oman dear, beneath the palm, Where oft we used to lay, Where spicy gales diffuse a charm, And wonton breezes play, There do I sit, and weep thy shade, To unknown regions borne ; Till objects from the landscape fade, And night succeeds the morn. 35 BZDOUIJY* LOVE SOJVG. WHERE the rough bramble, and the wormwood grows, Where rocks of granite shadow o'er the waste, Where the clear spring with crystal water flows, AndTai'sf daughters with their pitchers haste. There did I steal a glance beneath the veil, That shades from scorching sands the lovely Zaid ; Whose kohl\ black eyes supass'd the soft gazelle, And from whose ebon arch love's wishes play'd. * Bedouins are the Arabs of the desart between the Red Sea and Palestine. \ Tai the name of a tribe near Palmyra. \ Kohl, a black dye formed with pulverized mi- neral, and laid on the eye-lashes. — Vide Volney and Shaw. An European lady would not perhaps bejea* lous of an Arabian beauty, such as the lovely Zaid. Her countenance of a deep yellow and brown, her eyes and eyebrows tinged with black ; her lips with blue, and the nails of her fingers with henna or yel- low : yet such is the attraction of nature and habit, that I doubt whether the European lady, with her rouge and powder would rival this nymph at Palmyra* 36 Straight was her waist, more supple than the lance, . Her lips with blue, her nails with yellow dyed, More light than untrained colt she seem'd to dance, And Tai's daughters own'd her for their pride. The rich pomegranate swelling on the bough, Shrinks when compar'd to Zaid's more lovely breast. To her I secret make my morning vow ; For her I sigh, when all our tribe's at rest. Sweeter than honey, or a noon-felt air, Her flowing words glide o'er her prattling tongue : For her I'd brave the sun's meridian glare, Or from the dusty tyger snatch her young. Worn with desire, my soul alone remains, For o'er the sand my body casts no shade* : * This is a common figure among the Bedouins, and not unaptly applied, as the following description from Volney will shew : A few of them fsays he J voho had never seen a town, came to Acre in the time of Shaik Dakar : their withered legs had no calf, and appeared to consist merely of tendons. Their bellies seemed stuck to their backs, and their hair