. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/mfingalepicpoemOOtrum M'FINGAL: ^N" epic :poem. / BY JOHN TRUMBULL I AVITH INTRODUCTION AND NOTES, BY BENSON J. LOSSING, i AUTHOR OF "pictorial field book of the revolution," etc. 33 NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM, 115 NASSAU STREET. 1860. % f f^ Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S57, by G. P. PUTNAM, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. INTRODUCTION. The scenes and incidents of the old war for independence, known as the American Revolu- tion, furnished themes for contemplation and comment for every variety of minds, and evolved many brilliant sparks of genius which might otherwise have remained latent in the flint of common thought. "While the powers of highest statesmanship and military skill were demanded in the management of great public interests, there appeared much in the details of current events to excite mirth and provoke the keenest weapons of wit and satire to wonderful activity. Prudence generally commended anonymity to those who used the Press for the exercise of these weapons, at a time when there was an enemy in every bush. But such active men as 4 Introduction. Paine, Hopkinson, Freneau, Trumbull, and others of less note, could not long wear the disguise so as effectually to conceal themselves, and they became objects of admiration for the Patriots, and of hatred for the Loyalists. Of all the literary productions of that day, having for its theme the character and doings of the men and times of the Revolution, the remarkable epic entitled M'Fingal is confess- edly most deserving of immortality. It holds an honorable place among works of highest poetic merit ; and as a satire, applied with scath- ing power to those who opposed the war, and were active in their loyalty to the king, it ex- hibits force rarely equalled, and never surpassed by its predecessors in that peculiar field. That force can be appreciated now, when almost three generations of men have passed away since the actors in the drama were upon the stage, only by a thorough knowledge of the point of each allusion, drawn from the charac- ter of the times, and familiarity with the social and political position of the victims of the keen Damascene blade of the satirist. The late Timothy Dwight, President of Yale College, who was a compatriot, a brother poet, Introduction. 5 and a friend of the author, writing in long-after years, said : " It may be observed, without any partiality, that M'Fingal is not inferior in wit and humor to Hudibras ; and in every other re- spect is superior. It has a regular plan, in which all the parts are well proportioned and connected. The subject is fairly proposed, and the story conducted through a series of ad- vancements and retardations to a catastrophe, which is natural and complete. The versifica- tion is far better, the poetry is in several in- stances in a good degree elegant, and in some even sublime. It is also free from those endless digressions, which, notwithstanding the wit dis- covered in them, are so tedious in Hudibras ; the protuberances of which are a much larger mass than the body on which they grow." " The Hudibrastic body," says the Cyclopae- dia of American Literature, "is thoroughly interpenetrated by its American spirit. The illustrations, where there were the greatest temptations to plagiarism, are drawn from the writer's own biblical and classical reading, and the colloquial familiarities of the times. For the manners of the poem, there is no record of the period which supplies so vivid a presenta- 6 Introduction. tion of the old Revolutionary Whig habits of thinking and acting. We are among the ac- tors of the day — the town committees, the yeo- manry, the politicians and soldiers, participating in the rough humors of the times ; for nothing is more characteristic of the struggle than a certain vein of pleasantry and hearty animal spirits which entered into it. Hardships were endured with fortitude, for which there was occasion enough, but the contest was carried on with wit as with other weapons." The purpose of the poem was explained by the author himself, in a letter to the Marquis de Chastellux, written in 1785. " It had been un- dertaken,'' he said, " at the instigation of some of the leading members of the first Congress, who urged him to compose a satirical poem on the events of the campaign in the year 1775 ; " and that he " had aimed at expressing, in a poetical manner, a general account of the American contest, with a particular description of the character and manners of the times, in- terspersed with anecdotes, which no history could probably record or display ; and where as much impartiality as possible, satirize the follies and extravagancies of his countrymen, as well as Introduction. 7 of their enemies. I determined," he says, "to describe every subject in the manner it struck my own imagination, and without confining my- self to a perpetual effort at wit, drollery and humor, indulge every variety of manner, as my subject varied, and insert all the ridicule, satire, sense, sprightliness and elevation, of which I was master." How well this design was exe- cuted, the intelligent reader will discover. The first and second cantos of M'Fingal were published as one, in a thin pamphlet of forty pages, by William and Thomas Bradford, of Philadelphia. It was issued in the Autumn of 1775, as Canto Z, or the Town-Meeting. In the course of the next year it was reprinted in London, where it passed through several editions, and was very popular with the anti- ministerial party in Great Britain and America. For a long time it was believed to be the pro- duction of some English scholar, and made a very favorable impression everywhere, on ac- count of its literary merits. As a political satire it was regarded as inimitable, and was praised by men of all parties. But when it was known that the author was a native of New England, the London press and loyal writers in 8 Introduction. America, poured obloquy and contempt upon him in full measure. When the first part of M'Fingal was pub- lished, the author had sketched a plan for its extension, but he did not take it up again until the close of the war, when his friends urged him to complete it. He did so, by dividing the first half into two cantos, and adding two more. The whole work was printed and published by Hudson and Godwin at Hartford in Connecticut, before the close of 1782. Of that edition the one now offered to the public is a faithful tran- script. In the explanatory notes appended to the Poem in the present edition, the reader will find that full information which is necessary to a proper appreciation of the force of the satire. John Trumbull, the author of M'Fingal, was the child of a congregational minister. He was an only son, delicate in physical constitution, and a favorite of his accomplished mother. He was an exceedingly precocious child, and at the age of seven years was considered qualified to enter Yale College, as a student. There he was graduated, in 1*767, with the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and remained a student three Introduction. 9 years longer. He turned his attention chiefly to polite literature, as well as the Greek and Latin classics, and became a most accomplished scholar. He and Timothy Dwight became in timate friends, and the bond of mutual attach- ment was severed only by death. They were co-essayists, in 1769; and, in 1771, they were both appointed tutors in the college. The fol- lowing year young Trumbull published the first part of a poem entitled The Progress of Dul- ness. He selected the law as his profession, and devoted much of his leisure time to its study. He was admitted to the bar in 1773, but immediately afterward went to Boston, and placed himself under the instructions of John Adams. While in Boston he wrote an Elegy on the Times, a poem in sixty-eight stanzas, which celebrated the Boston Port Bill, the non-importation associations, and the present strength and future glory of the country. He commenced the practice of law at Hartford, in 1781, and soon became distinguished for legal acumen and forensic eloquence. As we have observed, his 3PFingal was completed, and published at Hartford in 1782. As authors were then unprotected by copyright laws, there io Introduction. were more than thirty different pirated impres- sions printed, and circulated by " newsmongers, hawkers, peddlers, and petty chapmen." Mr. Trumbull was soon afterward associated with Humphreys, Barlow, and Dr. Lemuel Hopkins, in the production of a work which they styled The Anarchiad. It contained bold satire, and exerted considerable influence on the popular taste. In 1789, Mr. Trumbull was appointed State Attorney for the county of Hartford ; and, hi 1792, he represented that district in the Con- necticut legislature. His health failed ; and, in 1795, he resigned his office, and declined all public business. Toward the close of 1798, a severe illness formed the crisis of his nervous excitement, and after that his health was much better. He was again elected to a seat in the State legislature in May, 1800, and the follow- ing year he was appointed a judge of the Su- perior Court of Connecticut. From that time he abandoned party politics, as inconsistent with judicial duties. In 1808, he was ap- pointed judge of the Supreme Court of Errors, in which office he remained several years. In the year 1805, Woodruff and Periam printed an Introduction. ii edition of M'Fingal at Elizabethtown, in New Jersey, by permission of the author. In 1820, he revised his works, and they were published in Hartford, in handsome style, by Samuel G. Goodrich, from whom the author received the handsome compensation of one thousand dol- lars. Judge Trumbull and his wife went to De- troit in 1825, and made their abode with their daughter, Mrs. Woodbridge, where he died of gradual decay, on the 10th of May, 1831, at the age of eighty-one years. V M'FINGAL : A MODERN EPIC POEM, In FOUR CANTOS. Ergo non fatis eft rifu diducere rictum Auditoris : et eft quaedam tamen hie quoque virtus ; Eft brevitate opus, ut currat fententia, neu fe Impediat verbis laflas onerantibus aures. Et fermone opus eft modo trifti, faepe jocofo, Defendente vicem modo Rhetoris, atque Poetae, Interdum urbani parcentis viribus atque Extenuantis eas confulto. Ridiculum acri Fortius et melius magnas plerumque fecat res. Horat. Lib. i. Sat. 10. HARTFORD: Printed by Hudson and Goodwin, near the Great Bridge, 1782. M'FINGAL : CANTO FIRST OR The TOWN-MEETING, A. M. VK^HEN Yankies 1 , fkill'd in martial rule, Firft put the Britifli troops to fchool ; Inftru&ed them in warlike trade, And new manoeuvres of parade ; The true war-dance of Yanky-reels, And manual exercife of heels ; Made them give up, like faints complete, The arm of flefh and truft the feet, And work, like Chriftians undifTembling, Salvation out, by fear and trembling 2 ; Taught Percy fafhionable races, And modern modes of Chevy-chaces 3 : From 16 M'Fingal: [canto From Bofton, in his beft array, Great 'Squire M'Fingal 4 took his way, And graced with enfigns of renown, Steer'd homeward to his native town. His high defcent our heralds trace To Oman's famed Fingalian race : For tho' their name fome part may lack, Old Fingal fpelt it with a Mac ; Which great M'Pherfon, with fubmiffion We hope will add, the next edition 5 . His fathers flourifh'd in the Highlands Of Scotia's fog-benighted iflands ; Whence gain'd our 'Squire two gifts by right, Rebellion and the Second-fight 6 . Of these the firft, in ancient days, Had gain'd the nobleft palms of praife, 'Gainft Kings flood forth and many a crown'd head With terror of its might confounded ; Till rofe a King with potent charm His foes by goodnefs to difarm, Whom first.] The Town -Meeting, a M Whom ev'ry Scot and Jacobite 7 Straight fell in love with, at firft fight ; Whofe gracious fpeech, with aid of penfions, Hufh'd down all murmurs of dhTenfions, And with the found of potent metal, Brought all their bluft'ring swarms to fettle 8 ; Who rain'd his minifterial mannas, Till loud Sedition fimg hofannahs ; The good Lords-Bilhops and the Kirk United in the public work 9 ; Rebellion from the Northern regions, With Bute and Mansfield fwore allegiance 10 ; And all combin'd to raze as nuifance, Of church and date, the conftitutions ; Pull down the empire, on whofe ruins They meant to edify their new ones ; Enflave th' American wildernefles, And tear the provinces in pieces n : For thefe our 'Squire among the valiant'ft, Employ'd his time and tools and talents ; And in their caufe with manly zeal Ufed his firft virtue, to rebel ; And 1 8 M'Fingal: [canto And found this new rebellion pleafing As his old king-deftroying treafon. Nor lefs avail'd his optic Height, And Scottifh gift of fecond-fight. No antient fybil fam'd in rhyme Saw deeper in the womb of time ls ; No block in old Dodona's 13 grove, Could ever more orac'lar prove. Nor only faw he all that was, But much that never came to pass ; Whereby all Prophets far outwent he, Tho' former days produc'd a plenty; For any man with half an eye, What ftands before him may efpy; But optics fharp it needs I ween, To fee what is not to be feen. As in the days of antient fame Prophets and poets were the fame, And all the praife that poets gain Is but for what th' invent and feign : So gain'd our 'Squire his fame by feeing Such things as never would have being. Whence first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m. 19 Whence he for oracles was grown The very tripod" of his town. Gazettes no fooner rofe a lye in, But ftraight he fell to prophefying ; Made dreadful {laughter in his courfe, O'erthrew provincials, foot and horfe ; Brought armies o'er by fudden preffings Of Hanoverians, Swifs and Heflians 15 ; Feafted with blood his Scottifh clan, And hang'd all rebels, to a man ; Divided their eftates and pelf, And took a goodly fhare himfelf I6 . All this with fpirit energetic, He did by fecond-light prophetic. Thus ftor'd with intellectual riches, Skill'd was our 'Squire in making fpeeches, Where ftrength of brain united centers With ftrength of lungs furpaffing Stentor's 17 . But as fome mufquets fo contrive it, As oft to mifs the mark they drive at, And tho' well aim'd at duck or plover, Bear wide and kick their owners over : So 20 M * F I N G A L : [CANTO So far'd our 'Squire, whofe reas'ning toil Would often on himfelf recoil, And (o much injur'd more his fide, The ftronger arg'ments he applied : As old war-elephants difmay'd, Trode down the troops they came to aid, And hurt their own fide more in battle Than lefs and ordinary cattle. ls Yet at town-meetings ev'ry chief Pinn'd faith on great M'Fingal's fleeve, And as he motion'd, all by rote Rais'd fympathetic hands to vote. The town, our Hero's fcene of action, Had long been torn by feuds of faction, And as each party's ftrength prevails, It turn'd up diff'rent, heads or tails ; With conftant rattling in a trice Show'd various fides as oft as dice : As that fam'd weaver, wife t' Ulyfles, By night each day's work pick'd in pieces, An tho' fhe iloutly did beftir her, Its nnifhing was ne'er the nearer 1 .19 So first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m . 21 So did this town with ftedfaft zeal Weave' cob-webs for the public weal, Which when compleated, or before, A fecond vote in pieces tore. They met, made fpeeches full long winded, Ref .ilv'd, protefted, and refcinded ; AddrefTes figned, then chofe Committees, To flop all drinking of Bohea-teas ; With winds of do£lrine veer'd about, And turn'd all Whig-Committees out 20 . Meanwhile our Hero, as their head, In pomp the tory 21 faction led, Still following, as the 'Squire fhould please, Succeffive on, like files of geefe. And now the town was fummon'd greeting, To grand parading of town-meeting ; A mow, that Grangers might appall, As Rome's grave fenate did the Gaul 22 . High o'er the rout, on pulpit Hairs 23 , Like den of thieves in houfe of pray'rs, (That houfe, which loth a rule to break, Serv'd heav'n but one day in the week, Open 22 M'Fingal: [canto Open the reft for all fupplies Of news and politics and lies) Stood forth the conftable, and bore His ftafF, like Merc'ry's wand of yore' 24 , Wav'd potent round, the peace to keep, As that laid dead men's fouls to fleep. Above and near th' hermetic ftafF, The moderator's upper half, In grandeur o'er the cufhion bow'd, Like Sol half-feen behind a cloud. 25 Beneath ftood voters of all colours, Whigs, tories, orators and bawlers, With ev'ry tongue in either faction, Prepar'd, like minute-men' 26 , for action ; Where truth and falfehood, wrong and right, Draw all their legions out to fight ; With equal uproar, fcarcely rave, Oppofing winds in iEolus' cave 27 ; Such dialogues with earneft face, Held never Balaam with his afs 28 . With daring zeal and courage bleft Honorius 29 firft the crowd addrefs'd ; When first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m. 23 When now our 'Squire returning late, Arrived to aid the grand debate, With ftrange four faces fat him down, While thus the orator went on. " — For ages bleft, thus Britain rofe The terror of encircling foes ; Her heroes rul'd the bloody plain ; Her conq'ring ftandard aw'd the main : The diff 'rent palms her triumphs grace, Of arms in war, of arts in peace : UnharrafT'd by maternal care, Each riling province flourifh'd fair ; Whofe various wealth with lib'ral hand, By. far o'er-paid the parent-land 30 . But tho' fo bright her fun might fhine, 'Twas quickly hailing to decline, With feeble rays, too weak t' affuage, The damps, that chill the eve of age. For ftates, like men, are doom'd as well Th' infirmities of age to feel 31 ; And 24 M * F I N G A l : [canto And from their diff'rent forms of empire Are feiz'd with ev'ry deep diftemper. Some ftates high fevers have made head in, Which nought could cure but copious bleeding ; While others have grown dull and dozy, Or fix'd in helplefs idiocy; Or turn'd demoniacs to belabour Each peaceful habitant and neighbour ; Or vex't with hypocondriac fits, Have broke their ftrength and loft their wits. Thus now while hoary years prevail, Good Mother Britain feem'd to fail ; Her back bent, crippled with the weight Of age and debts and cares of ftate : For debts me ow'd, and thofe fo large, As twice her wealth could not difcharge, And now 'twas thought, fo high they'd grown, She'd break and come upon the town 3 '-'; Her arms, of nations once the dread, She fcarce could lift above her head ; Her deafen'd ears ('twas all their hope) The final trump perhaps might ope, So first.] The Town -Meeting, a. m. 25 So long they'd been in ftupid mood, Shut to the hearing of all good ; Grim Death had put her in his fcroll, Down on the execution-roll ; And Gallic crows, as fhe grew weaker, Began to whet their beaks to pick her 3a And now her pow'rs decaying faft, Her grand ClimacVric had fhe paft, And, juft like all old women clfe, Fell in the vapours much by fpells. Strange whimfies on her fancy (truck, And gave her brain a difmal fhock ; Her mem'ry fails, her judgment ends ; She quite forgot her neareft friends, Loft all her former fenfe and knowledge, And fitted faft for Beth'lem college 34 ; Of all the pow'rs me once retain'd, Conceit and pride alone remain'd. As Eve when falling was fo modeft To fancy fhe fhould grow a goddefs 35 ; As madmen, ftraw who long have flept on, Will stile them, Jupiter or Neptune: So 26 M ' F I N G A L : [CANTC So Britain 'midft her airs fo flighty, Now took a whim to be Almighty; Urg'd on to defp'rate heights of frenzy, Affirm'd her own Omnipotency 36 ; Would rather ruin all her race, Than 'bate Supremacy an ace ; AfTumed all rights divine, as grown The churches head 37 , like good Pope Joan 38 ; Swore all the world mould bow and fkip To her almighty Goody fhip ; Anath'matiz'd each unbeliever, And vow'd to live and rule forever. Her fervants humour'd every whim, And own'd at once her pow'r fupreme, Her follies pleas'd in all their ftages, For fake of legacies and wages ; In Stephen's Chapel 39 then in ftate too Set up her golden calf to pray to, Proclaim'd its pow'r and right divine, And call'd for worfhip at its fhrine, And for poor Heretics to burn us, Bade North 40 prepare his fiery furnace; Struck first.] The Town-Meeting, a.m. 27 Struck bargains with the Romifh churches Infallibility to purchafe ; Set wide for Popery the door, Made friends with Babel's fcarlet whore 41 , Join'd both the matrons firm in clan ; No fillers made a better fpan. No wonder then, ere this was over, That me mould make her children fuffer. She firft, without pretence of reafon, Claim'd right whate'er we had to feize on ; And with determin'd refolution, To put her claims in execution, Sent fire and fword, and called it, Lenity, Starv'd us, and chriften'd it, Humanity 42 . For fhe, her cafe grown defperater, Miftook the plaineft things in nature ; Had loft all ufe of eyes or wits ; Took flav'ry for the bill of rights 43 ; Trembled at Whigs and deem'd them foes, And ftopp'd at loyalty her nofe ; Stiled her own children, brats and caitiffs, And knew us not from th y Indian natives. What 2 g M'FlNGAL. [CANTO What tho' with fupplicating pray'r We begg'd our lives and goods fhe'd fpare 41 ; Not vainer vows, with fillier call, Elijah's prophets rais'd to Baal 13 ; A worlhipp'd flock of god, or goddefs, Had better heard and underftood us. So once Egyptians at the Nile Ador'd their guardian Crocodile, Who heard them nrft with kindeft ear, And ate them to reward their pray'r !fi ; And could he talk, as kings can do, Had made as gracious fpeeches too n . Thus fpite of pray'rs her fchemes purfuing, She ftill went on to work our ruin ; Annull'd our charters of releafes 48 , And tore our title-deeds in pieces ; Then fign'd her warrants of ejection, And gallows rais'd to itretch our necks on : And on thefe errands fent in rage, Her bailiff, and her hangman, Gage 49 , And at his heels, like dogs to bait us, Difpatch'd her Pofle Comitatus 50 . No first.] The Town- Meeting, a.m. 29 No flate e'er chofe a fitter perfon, To carry fuch a filly farce on. As Heathen gods in antient days Received at fecond-hand their praife, Stood imag'd forth in ftones and flocks, And deified in barber's blocks ; So Gage was chofe to reprefent Th' omnipotence of Parliament. And as old heroes gain'd, by fhifts, From gods, as poets tell, their gifts ; Our Gen'ral, as his a&ions fhow, Gain'd like afliftance from below, By Satan graced with full fupplies, From all his magazine of lies. Yet could his practice ne'er impart The wit to tell a lie with art. Thofe lies alone are formidable, Where artful truth is mixt with fable ; But Gage has bungled oft fo vilely, No foul would credit lies fo filly, Outwent all faith and ftretch'd beyond Credulity's extremeft end. Whence 30 M'Fingal. [canto Whence plain it feems tho' Satan once O'erlook'd with fcorn each brainlefs dunce, And blund'ring brutes in Eden fhunning, Chofe out the ferpent for his cunning 01 ; Of late he is not half fo nice, Nor picks affiftants, 'caufe they're wife. For had he flood upon perfection, His prefent friends had loft th' election, And far'd as hard in this proceeding, As owls and afTes did in Eden. Yet fools are often dang'rous enemies, As meaneft reptiles are moll venomous ; Nor e'er could Gage by craft and prowefs Have done a whit more mifchief to us : Since he began th* unnatural war, The work his mailers fent him for. And are there in this freeborn land Among ourfelves a venal band, A daflard race, who long have fold Their fouls and confciences for gold ; Who FIRST .]The Town-Meeting, a.m. 31 Who wifh to flab their country's vitals, If they might heir furviving titles ; With joy behold our mifchiefs brewing, Infult and triumph in our ruin ? Priefts who, if Satan mould fit down, To make a Bible of his own, Would gladly for the fake of mitres, Turn his infpir'd and facred writers ; Lawyers, who mould he wifh to prove His title t' his old feat above, Would, if his caufe he'd give 'em fees in, Bring writs of Entry fur difleifm 52 , Plead for him boldly at the feffion, And hope to put him in pofleffion ; Merchants who, for his kindly aid, Would make him partners in their trade, Hang out their ligns in goodly fhow, Infcrib'd with 'Beelzebub and Co.' And Judges, who would lift his pages, For proper liveries and wages ; And who as humbly cringe and bow To all his mortal fervants now ? There 3 2 M * F I N G A l : [canto There are ; and fhame with pointing geftures, Marks out th' AddrelTers and Proteflers 53 ; Whom, following down the ftream of fate, Contempts ineffable await, And public infamy forlorn, Dread hate and everlaiting fcorn." As thus he fpake, our 'Squire M'Fingal Gave to his partizans a fignal. Not quicker roll'd the waves to land, When Mofes wav'd his potent wand, Nor with more uproar, than the Tories Set up a gen'ral rout in chorus ; Laugh'd, hifs'd, hem'd, murmur'd, groan'd and jeer'd ; Honorius now could fcarce be heard. Our Mufe amid th' increafmg roar, Could not diftinguifh one word more : Tho' fhe fat by, in firm record To take in fhorthand ev'ry word ; As antient Muses wont, to whom Old Bards for depofitions come ; Who mult have writ 'em ; for how elfe Could they each fpeech verbatim tell 's ? And first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m. 33 And tho' fome readers of romances Are apt to ftrain their tortur'd fancies, And doubt, when lovers all alone Their fad foliloquies do groan, Grieve many a page with no one near 'em, And nought but rocks and groves to hear 'em, What fpright infernal could have tattled. And told the authors all they prattled ; Whence fome weak minds have made objection, That what they fcribbled mull be fiction : 'Tis falfe ; for while the lovers fpoke, The Mufe was by, with table-book, And leafl fome blunder might enfue, Echo flood clerk and kept the cue. And tho' the fpeech ben't worth a groat, As ufual, 'tisn't the author's fault, But error merely of the prater, Who mould have talk'd to th' purpofe better : Which full excufe, my critic-brothers, May help me out, as well as others ; And 'tis defign'd, tho' here it lurk, To ferve as preface to this work. So 34 M'Fingal: [cantc So let it be — for now our 'Squire No longer could contain his ire ; And rifing 'midft applauding Tories, Thus vented wrath upon Honorius. Quoth he, " 'Tis wondrous what ftrange fluff Your Whig's-heads are compounded of; Which force of logic cannot pierce, Nor fyllogiftic carte & tierce, Nor weight of fcripture or of reafon Suffice to make the leaft impreffion. Not heeding what ye raif'd contefl on, Ye prate, and beg or fteal the queftion ; And when your boafled arguings fail, Strait leave all reaf'ning off, to rail. Have not our High-Church Clergy 54 made it Appear from fcriptures which ye credit, That right divine from heav'n was lent To kings, that is the Parliament, Their fubje&s to opprefs and teaze, And ferve the Devil when they pleafe? Did they not write and pray and preach, And torture all the parts of fpeech, About first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m. 35 About Rebellion make a pother, From one end of the land to th* other ? And yet gain'd fewer prof'lyte Whigs, Than old St. Anth'ny 'rnongft the pigs ; And chang'd not half fo many vicious As Auftin, when he preach'd to fifties ; Who throng'd to hear, the legend tells, Were edified and wagg'd their tails K : But fcarce you'd prove it, if you tried, That e'er one Whig was edified. Have ye not heard from Parfon Walter 50 Much dire prefage of many a halter ? What warnings had ye of your duty From our old Rev'rend Sam. Auchmuty 57 ? From Priefts of all degrees and metres, T' our fag-end man poor Parfon Peters 53 ? Have not our Cooper 59 and our Seabury 60 Sung hymns, like Barak and old Deborah 61 ; Prov'd all intrigues to fet you free Rebellion 'gainft the pow'rs that be ; Brought over many a fcripture text That ufed to wink at rebel fe&s, Coax'd 36 M'Fingal: [cantc Coax'd wayward ones to favour regents, Or paraphraf'd them to obedience ; Prov'd ev'ry king, ev'n thofe confeft Horns of th' Apocalyptic beafh 62 , And fprouting from its noddles feven, Ordain'd, as bifhops are, by heav'n ; (For reafons fim'lar, as we're told That Tophet was ordain'd of old) By this lay-ordination valid Becomes all fanctified and hallow'd, Takes patent out when heav'n has fign'd it, And Harts up ftrait, the Lord's anointed ? Like extreme unction that can cleanfe Each penitent from deadly fins, Make them run glib, when oil'd by Prieit, The heav'nly road, like wheels new greaf'd, Serve them, like fhoeball 63 , for defences 'Gainfl: wear and tear of confciences : So king's anointment cleans betimes, Like fuller's earth 61 , all fpots of crimes, For future knav'ries gives commimons, Like Papifts finning under licence". F01 first.] The Town- Meeting, a. m. y, For heav'n ordain'd the origin, Divines declare, of pain and fin ; Prove fuch great good they both have done us, Kind mercy 'twas they came upon us : For without pain and fin and folly Man ne'er were bleft, or wife, or holy ; And we fhould thank the Lord, 'tis fo, As authors grave wrote long ago. Now heav'n its iflues never brings Without the means, and thefe are kings ; And he, who blames when they announce ills, Would counteract, th' eternal counfels. As when the Jews, a murm'ring race, By conftant grumblings fell from grace, Heav'n taught them firft to know their diflance, By famine, flav'ry and Philiftines ; When thefe could no repentance bring, In wrath it fent them laft a king 63 : So nineteen, 'tis believ'd, in twenty Of modern kings for plagues are fent you ; Nor can your cavillers pretend, But that they anfwer well their end. 'Tis 38 M ' F I N G A l : [canto 'Tis yours to yield to their command, As rods in Providence's hand ; And if it means to fend you pain, You turn your nofes up in vain ; Your only way's in peace to bear it, And make neceffity a merit. Hence fure perdition mull await The man, who rifes 'gainft the ftate, Who meets at once the damning fentence, Without one loophole for repentance; E'en tho' he 'gain the royal fee, And rank among the pow'rs that be CT : For hell is theirs, the fcripture fhows, Whoe'er the pow'rs that be oppofe, And all thofe pow'rs (I am clear that 'tis fo) Are damn'd for ever, ex officio. Thus far our Clergy ; but 'tis true, We lack'd not earthly reaf'ners too. Had I the Poet's brazen lungs 68 As found-board to his hundred tongues, I could not half the fcriblers mufter That fwarm'd round Rivington 09 in clufter; Aflemblies, first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m . 39 AfTemblies, Councilmen, forfooth; Brum 70 , Cooper 71 , Wilkins 72 , Chandler 73 , Booth 71 . Yet all their arguments and fap'ence, You did not value at three halfpence. Did not our Maflachufettenfis 7j For your convi&ion ftrain his fenfes ? Scrawl ev'ry moment he could fpare, From cards and barbers and the fair ; Show, clear as fun in noonday heavens, You did not feel a fingle grievance ; Demonftrate all your oppofition Sprung from the eggs of foul fedition ; Swear he had feen the nefl fhe laid in, And knew how long fhe had been fitting ; Could tell exact what ftrength of heat is Requir'd to hatch her out Committees 76 ; What fhapes they take, and how much longer's The fpace before they grow t' a Congrefs ? New whitewafh'd Hutchinfon 77 and varnifh'd, Our Gage, who'd got a little tarnifh'd, Made 'em new malks, in time no doubt, For Hutchinfon's was quite worn out ; And 4 o M ' F I N G A l : [canto And while he muddled all his head You did not heed a word he faid. Did not our grave Judge Sewall 73 hit The fummit of news-paper wit ? Fill'd ev'ry leaf of ev'ry paper Of Mills and Hicks 79 and mother Draper 80 ; Drew proclamations, works of toil, In true fublime of fcarecrow ftyle ; Wrote farces too, 'gainft Sons of Freedom 81 , All for your good, and none would read 'em ; Denounc'd damnation on their frenzy, Who died in Whig-impenitency ; Affirm'd that heav'n would lend us aid, As all our Tory-writers faid, And calculated fo its kindnefs, He told the moment when it join'd us." " 'Twas then belike, Honorius cried, When you the public faft defied 82 , Refuf'd to heav'n to raife a prayer, Becaufe you'd no connections there ; And fince with rev'rent hearts and faces To Governors you'd make addrefles, In first.] The Town-Meeting, a. m . 41 In them, who made you Tories, feeing You lived and mov'd and had your being ; Your humble vows you would not breathe To pow'rs you'd no acquaintance with." " As for your falls, replied our 'Squire, What circumilance could fails require ; We kept them not, but 'twas no crime ; We held them merely lofs of time. For what advantage firm and lafling, Pray did you ever get by failing ? And what the gains that can arife From vows and off'rings to the ikies ? Will heav'n reward with polls and fees, Or fend us Tea, as Conilgnees 83 , Give peniions, fal'ries, places, bribes, Or chufe us judges, clerks, or fcribes ? Has it commiffions in its gift; Or cafh, to ferve us at a lift ? Are acts of parliament there made, To carry on the placeman's trade ? Or has it pafs'd a fmgle bill To let us plunder whom we will ? And 4 2 M ' F I N G A l : [canto And iook our lift of placemen all over ; Did heav'n appoint our chief judge, Oliver iJ , Fill that high bench with ignoramus, Or has it councils by mandamus 83 ? Who made that wit of water-gruel 83 , A Judge of Admiralty, Sewall ? And were they not mere earthly ifruggles, That raif'd up Murray 87 , fay, and Ruggles 83 ? Did heav'n fend down, our pains to med'cine, That old fimplicity of Edfon bJ , Or by election pick out from us, That Marfhfield blund'rer Nat. Ray Thomas 111 ; Or had it any hand in ferving A Loring 91 , Pepp'rell °\ Browne 93 , or Erving- 4 ? Yet we've fome faints, the very thing, We'll pit againft the bell: you'll bring For can the ftrongeft fancy paint Than Hutchinfon a greater faint ? Was there a parfon ufed to pray At times more reg'lar twice a day ; As folks exadl have dinners got, Whether they've appetites or not ? Was FIRST .] The Town -Meeting, a.m. 43 Was there a zealot more alarming 'Gainfl public vice to hold forth fermon, Or fix'd at church, whofe inward motion Roll'd up his eyes with more devotion ? What Puritan 9 " could ever pray- In Godlier tone, than treaf'rer Gray 93 , Or at town-meetings fpeechify'ng, Could utter more melodious whine, And fhut his eyes and vent his moan, Like owl afflicted in the fun ? Who once fent home his canting rival, Lord Dartmouth's 97 felf, might outbedrivel. " Have you forgot, Honorius cried, How your prime faint the truth defied, Affirm'd he never wrote a line Your charter'd rights to undermine ; When his own letters then were by, That prov'd his meffage all a lie 93 ? How many promifes he feaPd, To get th' oppreffive acts repeal'd, Yet once arriv'd on England's fliore, Set on the Premier to pafs more 99 ? But 44 M * F I N G A L . [canto But these are no defe&s, we grant, In a right loyal Tory faint, Whofe godlike virtues muft with eafe Atone fuch venal crimes as thefe : Or ye perhaps in fcripture fpy A new commandment, f Thou fhalt lie ; ' And if 't be fo (as who can tell ?) There's no one fure ye keep fo well." " Quoth he, For lies and promife-breaking Ye need not be in fuch a taking ; For lying is, we know and teach, The higheft privilege of fpeech ; The universal Magna Charta, To which all human race is party, Whence children firft, as David fays, Lay claim to 't in their earlier! days ; The only ftratagem in war, Our Gen'rals have occafion for ; The only freedom of the prefs Our politicians need in peace : And 'tis a fhame you wifh t' abridge us Of thefe our darling privileges. Thank first.] The Town-Meeting, a.m. 4.5 Thank heav'n, your fhot have mifs'd their aim, For lying is no fin, or fhame. As men laft wills may change again, Tho' drawn in name of God, amen ; Befure they mull have much the more, O'er promifes as great a pow'r, Which made in hafte, with fmall infpeclion, So much the more will need correction ; And when they've carelefs fpoke, or penn'd em, Have right to look 'em o'er and mend 'em ; Revife their vows, or change the text, By way of codicil annex'd, Turn out a promife, that was bafe, And put a better in its place. So Gage of late agreed, you know, To let the Bolton people go ; Yet when he faw 'gainft troops that brav'd him, They were the only guards that fav'd him 100 , Kept off that Satan of a Putnam, From breaking in to maul and mutt'n him 101 ; He'd too much wit fuch leagues t' obferve, And fhut them in again to ftarve. So 4-6 M ' F I N G A L . [CANTO So Mofes writes, when female Jews Made oaths and vows unfit for ufe, Their parents then might fet them free From that confcientious tyranny 102 : And mail men feel that fpir'tual bondage Forever, when they grow beyond age ; Nor have pow'r their own oaths to change ? I think the tale were very ftrange. Shall vows but bind the flout and ftrong, And let go women weak and young, As nets enclofe the larger crew, And let the fmaller fry creep thro' ? Befides, the Whigs have all been fet on, The Tories to affright and threaten, Till Gage amidft his trembling fits Has hardly kept him in his wits ; And tho' he fpeak with art and fineffe, 'Tis faid beneath durefs per minas. For we're in peril of our fouls From feathers, tar and lib'rty-poles 103 : And vows extorted are not binding In law, and fo not worth the minding. For first.] The Town-Meeting, a . m . 47 For we have in this hurly-burly Sent off our'confciences on furlow, Thrown our religion o'er in foi m ; Our {hip to lighten in the ftorm. Nor need we blufh your Whigs before ; If we've no virtue you've no more. Yet black with fins, would ftain a mitre, Rail ye at crimes by. ten tints whiter, And ftuff'd with choler atrabilious, Infult us here for peccadilloes ? While all your vices run fo high That mercy fcarce could find fupply : While mould you offer to repent, You'd need more falling days than Lent, More groans than haunted churchyard vallieSj And more confeffions than broad-alleys 104 . I'll mow you all at fitter time, The extent and greatnefs of your crime, And here demonftrate to your face, Your want of virtue, as of grace, Evinced from topics old and recent : But thus much mull fuffice at prefent. To 48 M ' F I N G A L : [CANTC To th' after-portion of the day, I leave what more remains to fay ; When I've good hope you'll all appear, More fitted and prepared to hear, And griev'd for all your vile demeanour But now 'tis time t' adjourn for dinner." M'FINGAL : CANTO SECOND, O R The TOWN-MEETING, P. M. ' I V HE Sun, who never flops to dine, Two hours had pafs'd the midway line, And driving at his ufual rate, Lafh'd on his downward car of ftate. And now expired the fhort vacation, And dinner done in epic famion ; While all the crew beneath the trees, Eat pocket-pies, or bread and cheefe ; Nor mall we, like old Homer care To verfify their bill of fare. For now each party, feafted well, Throng'd in, like fheep, at found of bell, With 5 o M * F I N G A l : [canto With equal fpirit took their places ; And meeting oped with three Oh yefles 1 : When firft the daring Whigs 't oppofe, Again the great M'Fingal rofe, Stretch'd magiilerial arm amain, And thus aflum'd th' accufing ftrain. " Ye Whigs attend, and hear affrighted The crimes whereof ye ftand indicted, The fins and follies paft all compafs, That prove you guilty or non compos. I leave the verdict to your fenfes, And jury of your confciences ; Which tho' they're neither good nor true, Muft yet convict you and your crew. Ungrateful fons ! a factious band, That rife againft your parent-land ! Ye viper'd race, that burft in ftrife, The welcome womb, that gave you life, Tear with fharp fangs and forked tongue, Th' indulgent bowels, whence you fprung ; And fcorn the debt of obligation You juftly owe the Britifh nation, Which second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m.* 51 Which fince you cannot pay, your crew Affedt to fwear 'twas never due. Did not the deeds of England's Primate 2 Firft drive your fathers to this climate, Whom jails and fines and ev'ry ill Forc'd to their good againft their will ? Ye owe to their obliging temper The peopling your newfangled empire, While ev'ry Britifh ac"t and canon Stood forth your caufa fine qua non. Did they not fend you charters o'er 3 , And give you lands you own'd before, Permit you all to fpill your blood, And drive out heathen where you could ; On thefe mild terms, that conqueft won, The realm you gain'd mould be their own. Or when of late attack'd by thofe, Whom her connection made your foes 4 , Did they not then, diftrefl in war, Send Gen'rals to your help from far 5 , Whofe aid you own'd in terms lefs haughty And thankfully o'erpaid your quota ? c Say 5 2 ~ M'Fingal: [canto Say, at what period did they grudge To fend you Governor or Judge, With all their miffionary crew, To teach you law and gofpel too ? Brought o'er all felons in the nation, To help you on in population ; Propos'd their Bifhops to furrender, And made their Priefts a legal tender, Who only afk'd in furplice clad, The fimple ty the of all you had 7 : And now to keep all knaves in awe, Have fent their troops t' eftablifh law, And with gunpowder, fire and ball, Reform your people one and all. Yet when their infolence and pride Have anger'd all the world befide, When fear and want at once invade, Can you refufe to lend them aid ; And rather rifque your heads in fight, Than gratefully throw in your mite 8 ? Can they for debts make fatisfacldon, Should they diipofe their realm by auction ; And second.] The Town-Meeting, p.m. 53 And fell off Britain's goods and land all To France and Spain by inch of candle ? Shall good king George, with want oppreft, Infert his name in bankrupt lift, And fhut up fhop, like failing merchant, That fears the bailiffs mould make fearch in't ; With poverty mall princes ftrive, And nobles lack whereon to live ? Have they not rack'd their whole inventions, To feed their brats on polls and penfions 9 , Made ev'n Scotch friends with taxes groan, And pick'd poor Ireland to the bone ; Yet have on hand as well deferving, Ten thousand baftards left for ftarving ? And can you now with confcience clear, Refufe them an afylum here, Or not maintain in manner fitting These genuine fons of mother Britain 10 ? T' evade thefe crimes of blackeft grain, You prate of liberty in vain, And ftrive to hide your vile deligns, With terms abftrufe like fchool-divines. Your 54 M * F I N G A l : [canto Your boafted patriotifm is fcarce, And country's love is but a farce ; And after all the proofs you bring, We Tories know there's no fuch thing. Our Englifh writers of great fame Prove public virtue but a name. Hath not Dalrymple " fhow'd in print, And Johnfon 12 too, there's nothing in't ? Produc'd you demonnration ample From other's and their own example, That felf is ftill, in either faction, The only principle of action ; The loadilone, whofe attracting tether Keeps the politic world together : And fpite of all your double-dealing, We Tories know 'tis fo, by feeling. Who heeds your babbling of tranfmitting Freedom to brats of your begetting, Or will proceed as though there were a tie, Or obligation to pofterity 13 ? We get 'em, bear 'em, breed and nurfe ; What has pofter'ty done for us, That second.] The Town -Meeting, p. m. 55 That we, left they their rights fhould lofe, Should truft our necks to gripe of noofe ? And who believes you will not run ? You're cowards, ev'ry mother's Ton ; And fhould you offer to deny, We've witnefTes to prove it by. Attend th' opinion firfl:, as referee, Of your old Gen'ral, flout Sir Jeffery 14 , Who fwore that with five thoufand foot He'd rout you all, and in purfuit, Run thro' the land as eafily, As camel thro' a needle's eye 10 . Did not the valiant Col'nel Grant Againft your courage make his flant, Affirm your univerfal failure In ev'ry principle of valour, And fwear no fcamp'rers e'er could match you, So fwift, a bullet fcarce could catch you 16 ? « And will ye not confefs in this, A judge moft competent he is, Well fkill'd on runnings to decide, As what himfelf has often tried ? 'Twould $6 M ' Fin gal. [canto 'Twould not methinks be labour loft, If you'd fit down and count the coft ; And ere you call your Yankies out, Firft think what work you've fet about. Have ye not rouz'd, his force to try on, That grim old beaft, the Britifh lion? And know you not that at a fup He's large enough to eat you up ? Have you furvey'd his jaws beneath, Drawn inventories of his teeth, Or have you weigh'd in even balance, His ftrength and magnitude of talons ? His roar would turn your boafts to fear, As eafily as four fmall-beer 17 , And make your feet from dreadful fray, By native inftinct run away. Britain, depend on't will take on her T' aflert her dignity and honor, And ere fhe'd lofe your fhare of pelf, Deftroy your country and herfelf. For has not North declar'd they fight To gain fubftantial rev'nue by't 18 , Denied second.] The Town -Meeting, p.m. 5; Denied he'd ever deign to treat, Till on your knees and at his feet ? And feel you not a trifling ague, From Van's Delenda eft Carthago 19 ? For this, now Britain has come to't, Think you fhe has not means to do't ? Has fhe not fet to work all engines To fpirit up the native Indians, Send on your backs a favage band, With each a hatchet in his hand, T' amufe themfelves with fcalping knives, And butcher children and your wives 20 ; That ftie may boaft again with vanity, Her Englifh national humanity ? (For now in its primaeval fenfe, This term, human'ty, comprehends All things of which, on this fide hell, The human mind is capable ; And thus 'tis well, by writers fage, Applied to Britain and to Gage.) And on this work to raife allies, She fent her duplicate of Guys, To 8 M * F i n g a l : [canto To drive, at diff'rent parts at once, on Her flout Guy Carlton and Guy Johnfon 21 To each of whom, to fend again ye Old Guy of Warwick were a ninny 22 . Tho' the dun cow he fell'd in war, Thefe killcows are his betters far 23 . And has fhe not aflay'd her notes, To rouze your flaves to cut your throats, Sent o'er ambafTadors with guineas, To bribe your blacks in Carolinas 24 ? And has not Gage, her miffionary Turn'd many an Afric flave t' a Tory, And made th' Amer'can bifhop's fee grow, By many a new-converted Negro 25 ? As friends to gov'rnment did not he Their flaves at Bofton late set free ; Enlift them all in black parade, Set ofFwith regimental red 26 ? And were they not accounted then Among his very braveft men ? And when fuch means fhe ftoops to take, Think you fhe is not wide awake ? As second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m. 59 As Eliphaz' good man in Job Own'd num'rous allies thro' the globe ; Had brought the flones along the ftreet To ratify a cov'nant meet, And ev'ry beaft from lice to lions, To join in leagues of ftric~t alliance 27 : Has (he not cring'd, in fpite of pride, For like affistance far and wide ? Was there a creature fo defpif'd, Its aid me has not fought and priz'd ? Till all this formidable league rofe Of Indians, Britifh troops and Negroes 2S 3 And can you break thefe triple bands By all your workmanfhip of hands ? " " Sir, quoth Honorius, we prefume You guefs from paft feats, what's to come. And from the mighty deeds of Gage, Foretell how fierce the war he'll wage. You doubtlefs recollected here The annals of his firft. great year : While wearying out the Tories' patience, He fpent his breath in proclamations ; While 6o M'Fingal: L canto While all his mighty noife and vapour Was ufed in wrangling upon paper ; And boafted military fits Clofed in the draining of his wits ; While troops in Bofton commons plac'd '" Laid nought but quires of paper wafte ; While ftrokes alternate ftunn'd the nation, Proteft, addrefs and proclamation ; And fpeech met fpeech, fib clafh'd with fib, And Gage ftill anfwer'd, fquib for fquib. Tho' this not all his time was loft on ; He fortified the town of Bofton ; Built breaftworks that might lend affiftance To keep the patriots at a diftance 30 ; (For howfoe'er the rogues might feoff, He liked them beft the farther! off) Of mighty ufe and help to aid His courage, when he felt afraid ; And whence right off in manful ftation, He'd boldly pop his proclamation. Our hearts muft in our bofoms freeze At fuch heroic deeds as thefe." Vain second.] The Town-Meeting, p.m. 61 " Vain," quoth the 'Squire, "you'll find to fneer At Gage's firft triumphant year ; For Providence, difpos'd to teaze us, Can ufe what inftruments it pleafes. To pay a tax at Peter's wifh, His chief cafhier was once a Fifh 91 ; An Afs, in Balaam's fad difafter, Turn'd orator and fav'd his mafter 32 ; A Goofe plac'd centry on his ftation Preferv'd old Rome from defolation 33 ; An Englifh Biftiop's Cur of late Difclofed rebellions 'gainft the ftate 34 ; So Frogs croak'd Pharaoh to repentance, And Lice revers'd the threat'ning fentence 35 : iVnd heav'n can ruin you at pleafure, By our fcorn'd Gage, as well as Caefar. Yet did our hero in thefe days Pick up fome laurel wreaths of praife. And as the ftatuary of Seville Made his crackt faint an exc'llent devil; So tho' our war few triumphs brings, We gain'd great fame in other things. Did 62 M ' F I N G A l : [canto Did not our troops fhow much difcerning, And fkill your various arts in learning ? Outwent they not each native Noodle 36 By far in playing Yanky-doodle ; Which, as 'twas your New-England tune, 'Twas marvellous they took fo foon 37 ? And ere the year was fully thro', Did not they learn to foot it too ; And fuch a dance as ne'er was known, For twenty miles on end lead down ? Was there a Yanky trick you knew, They did not play as well as you ? Did they not lay their heads together, And gain your art to tar and feather, When Col'nel Nefbitt thro' the town, In triumph bore the country-clown ? Oh, what a glorious work to fing The vet'ran troops of Britain's king, Advent'ring for th' heroic laurel, With bag of feathers and tar-barrel ! To paint the cart where culprits ride, And Nefbitt marching at its fide, Great second.] The Town -Meeting, p . m . 63 Great executioner and proud, Like hangman high on Holbourn road ; And o'er the bright triumphal car The waving enfigns of the war 38 ! As when a triumph Rome decreed, For great Calig'la's valiant deed, Who had fubdued the Britifh feas, By gath'ring cockles from their bafe 39 ; In pompous car the conqu'ror bore His captiv'd fcallops from the fhore, Ovations gain'd his crabs for fetching, And mighty feats of oyfler-catching : O'er Yankies thus the war begun, They tarr'd and triumph'd over one ; And fought and boafted thro' the feafon, With might as great, and equal reafon. Yet thus, tho' fkill'd in vi&'ry's toils, They boaft, not unexpert, in wiles. For gain'd they not an equal fame in The arts of fecrecy and fcheming ? In ftratagems fhow'd mighty force, And moderniz'd the Trojan horfe, Play'd 6 4 M'Fingal: [canto Play'd o'er again thofe tricks Ulyflean, In their fam'd Salem-expedition ? For as that horfe, the Poets tell ye, Bore Grecian armies in his belly ; Till their full reck'ning run, with joy Their Sinon midwif'd them in Troy 40 : So in one {hip was Leslie 41 bold Cramm'd with three hundred men in hold, Equipp'd for enterprize and fail, Like Jonas flow'd in womb of whale. To Marblehead 4 ' 2 in depth of night, The cautious veflel wing'd her flight. And now the fabbath's filent day Call'd all your Yankies off to pray ; Remov'd each prying jealous neighbour, The fcheme and vefTel fell in labour ; Forth from its hollow womb pour'd haft'ly The Myrmidons of Col'nel Leflie : Not thicker o'er the blacken'd ftrand The frogs' detachment rufh'd to land, Equipp'd by onfet or furprize To florin th' entrenchment of the mice 4 . Thro' second.] The Town -Meeting, p. M . 65 Thro' Salem ftrait without delay, The bold battalion took its way, March'd o'er a bridge in open fight Of fev'ral Yankies arm'd for fight, Then without lofs of time, or men Veer'd round for Bofton back again ; And found fo well their projects thrive, That ev'ry foul got home alive 44 . Thus Gage's arms did fortune blefs With triumph, fafety and fuccess : But mercy is without difpute His firlt and darling attribute ; So great it far outwent and conquer'd His military fkill at Concord 45 . There when the war he chofe to wage Shone the benevolence of Gage ; Sent troops to that ill-omen'd place On errands meer of fpecial grace, And all the work he chofe them for Was to prevent a civil war 46 : And for that purpofe he projected The only certain way t' effeft it, To 66 * M'Fingal: [canto To take your powder, ftores and arms, And all your means of doing harms : As prudent folks take knives away, Left children cut themfelves at play. And yet tho' this was all his fcheme, This war you ftill will charge on him ; And tho' he oft has fwore and faid it, Stick clofe to fads and give no credit. Think you, he wifh'd you'd brave and beard him ? Why, 'twas the very thing that fcar'd him. He'd rather you mould all have run, Than ftay'd to fire a fingle gun. And for the civil war you lament, Faith, you yourfelves muft take the blame in't ; For had you then, as he intended, Giv'n up your arms, it muft have ended. Since that's no war, each mortal knows, Where one fide only gives the blows, ' And th' other bears 'em ; on reflection The moft you'll call it is correftion. Nor could the conteft have gone higher, If you had ne'er return'd the fire ; But second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m . 67 But when you mot, and not before, It then commene'd a civil war 47 . Elfe Gage, to end this controversy, Had but corrected you in mercy : Whom mother Britain old and wife, Sent o'er, the Col'nies to chaftise ; Command obedience on their peril Of minifterial whip and ferule ; And fince they ne'er mull come of age, Govern'd and tutor'd them by Gage. Still more, that this was all their errand, The army's conduct makes apparent. What tho' at Lexington you can fay They kill'd a few they did not fancy, At Concord then, with manful popping, Discharg'd a round the ball to open ? Yet when they faw your rebel-rout Determin'd Hill to hold it out ; Did they not mow their love to peace, And wifh, that difcord ilrait might ceafe, Demonftrate, and by proofs uncommon, Their orders were to injure no man ? For 68 M ' F I N G A l : [canto For did not ev'ry Reg'lar run As foon as e'er you fir'd a gun 4 '; Take the first fhot you fent them greeting, As meant their fignal for retreating ; And fearful if they ftaid for fport, You might by accident be hurt, Convey themselves with fpeed away Full twenty miles in half a day 49 ; Race till their legs were grown fo weary, They'd fcarce fuffice their weight to carry ? Whence Gage extols, from gen'ral hearfay, The great activ'ty of Lord Piercy 50 ; Whofe brave example led them on, And fpirited the troops to run ; And now may boaft at royal levees A Yanky-chase worth forty Chevys 51 . Yet you as vile as they were kind, Purfued, like tygers, ftill behind, Fir'd on them at your will, and fhut The town, as tho' you'd ftarve them out ; And with parade prepoft'rous hedg'd Affect to hold them there befieg'd 5 ' 2 ; (Tho' second.] The Town-Meeting, p.m. 69 (Tho' Gage, whom proclamations call Your Gov'rnor and Vice-Admiral, Whofe pow'r gubernatorial flill Extends as far as Bunker's hill ; Whofe admiralty reaches clever, Near half a mile up Myftic river 53 , Whofe naval force commands the feas, Can run away when'er he pleafe) Scar'd troops of Tories into town, And burnt their hay and houfes down, And menac'd Gage, unlefs he'd flee, To drive him headlong to the fea 54 ; As once, to faithless Jews a fign, The de'el, turn'd hog-reeve, did the fwine 55 . But now your triumphs all are o'er ; For fee from Britain's angry fhore With mighty ho lis of valour join Her Howe, her Clinton and Burgoyne 56 . As comets thro' the affrighted fkies Pour baleful ruin, as they rife 57 ; As JEtm, with infernal roar In conflagration fweeps the fhore ; Or 7° M ' F I N G A l : [canto Or as Abijah White when fent Our Marfhfield friends to reprefent, Himfelf while dread array involves, Commimons, piftols, fwords, refolves, In awful pomp defcending down, Bore terror on the factious town 58 : Not with lefs glory and affright, Parade thefe Gen'rals forth to fight. No more each Reg'lar Col'nel runs From whizzing beetles, as air-guns, Thinks hornbugs bullets, or thro' fears Mufkitoes takes for mufketeers ; Nor 'fcapes, as tho' you'd gain'd allies From Belzebub's whole holt of flies. No bug their warlike hearts appalls ; They better know the found of balls 59 . I hear the din of battle bray, The trump of horror marks its way. I see afar the fack of cities, The gallows ftrung with Whig-committees 60 ; Your Moderators triced, like vermin, And gate-pofts graced with heads of Chairmen ; Your second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m. 71 Your Gen'rals for wave-ofFrings hanging 61 , And ladders throng'd with Priefts haranguing. What pill'ries glad the Tories' eyes With patriot-ears for facrifice ! What whipping-pofts your chofen race Admit fucceffive in embrace 6 ' 2 , While each bears off his crimes, alack ! Like Bunyan's pilgrim, on his back 63 ; Where then, when Tories fcarce get clear, Shall Whigs and CongrefTes appear ? What rocks and mountains fhall you call To wrap you over with their fall, And fave your heads in thefe fad weathers, From fire and fword, and tar and feathers ! For lo, with Britifh troops tarbright, Again our Nefbitt heaves in fight ! He comes, he comes, your lines to ftorm, And rig your troops in uniform 64 ! To meet fuch heroes, will ye brag, With fury arm'd, and feather-bag ; Who wield their miffile pitch and tar, With engines new in Britifh war ? Lo 7 2 M 'Fin gal: [canto - Lo, where our mighty navy brings Deftruction on her canvas-wings € % While thro' the deeps her potent thunder, Shall found th' alarm to rob and plunder ! As Phoebus firft, fo Homer fpeaks, When he march'd out t' attack the Greeks 60 , 'Gainft mules fent forth his arrows fatal, And flew th' auxiliaries, their cattle ; So where our fhips fhall ftretch the keel, What conquer'd oxen fhall they fteal ! What heroes rifing from the deep Invade your marfhall'd hofts of fheep ! Difperfe whole troops of horfe, and preffing, Make cows furrender at difcretion ; Attack your hens, like Alexanders, ■ And reg'ments rout of geefe and ganders ; Or where united arms combine Lead captive many a herd of fwine 61 ! Then rufh in dreadful fury down To fire on ev'ry feaport town ; Difplay their glory and their wits, Fright unarm'd children into fits, And second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m. 73 And iloutly from th' unequal fray, Make many a woman run away' ! And can ye doubt whene'er we pleafe Our chiefs fhall boaft fuch deeds as thefe ? Have we not chiefs tranfcending far, The old fam'd thunderbolts of war ; Beyond the brave romantic fighters, Stiled fwords of death by novel-writers? Nor in romancing ages e'er rofe So terrible a tier of heroes. From Gage, what flames fright the waves ! How loud a blunderbufs is Graves 69 ! How Newport dreads the bluftring fallies, That thunder from our popgun, Wallace, While noife in formidable Arams Spouts from his thimble-full of brains 70 ! I fee you link with aw'd furprize ! I fee our Tory-brethren rife ! And as the fect'ries Sandemanian, Our friends defcribe their wifh'd Millennium 71 ; Tell how the world in ev'ry region At once fhall own their true religion ; For ?4 M'Fingal: [canto For heav'n with plagues of awful dread Shall knock all heretics o' th' head ; And then their church, the meek in fpirit, The earth, as promif'd, mail inherit, From the dead wicked, as heirs male, And next remainder-men in tail : Such ruin mall the Whigs opprefs ! Such fpoils our Tory friends mail blefs ! While Confifcation at command 72 Shall ftalk in horror thro' the land, Shall give your Whig-eftates away, And call our brethren into play. And can ye doubt or fcruple more, Thefe things are near you at the door ? Behold ! for tho' to reaf'ning blind, Signs of the times ye fure might mind, And view impending fate as plain As ye'd foretell a fhow'r of rain. Hath not heav'n warn'd you what muft enfue, And Providence declar'd againfl you ; Hung second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m. 75 Hung forth its dire portents of war, By figns and beacons in the air 13 ; Alarm'd old women all around By fearful noifes under ground ; While earth for many dozen leagues Groan'd with her difmal load of Whigs ? Was there a meteor far and wide But mufter'd on the Tory-fide ? A ftar malign that has not bent Its afpedts for the Parliament, Foreboding your defeat and mifery ; As once they fought againft old Sifera 74 ? Was there a cloud that fpread the fkies, But bore our armies of allies ? While dreadful hofts of fire Hood forth 'Mid baleful glimm'rings from the North ; Which plainly mows which part they join'd, For North's the minifter, ye mind ; Whence oft your quibblers in gazettes On Northern blafts have ftrain'd their wits 75 ; And think ye not the clouds know how To make the pun as well as you ? Did 76 M < F I N G A L : [CANTO Did there arife an apparition, But grinn'd forth ruin to fedition ? A death-watch, but has join'd our leagues, And click'd deftruclion to the Whigs ? Heard ye not, when the wind was fair, At night our or'tors in the air, That, loud as admiralty-libel, Read awful chapters from the bible, And death and deviltry denounc'd, And told you how you'd foon be trounc'd ? I fee to join our conqu'ring fide Heav'n, earth and hell at once allied ! See from your overthrow and end The Tories paradife afcend ; Like that new world that claims its ftation Beyond the final conflagration ! I fee the day that lots your fhare In utter darknefs and defpair ; The day of joy, when North, our Lord, His faithful fav'rites mall reward ! No Tory then mail fet before him Small wifh of 'Squire, or Juftice Quorum ; But second.] The Town-Meeting, p.m. 77 But 'fore his unmiftaken eyes See Lordlhips, ports and penfions rife. Awake to gladnefs then, ye Tories, Th' unbounded profpecl: lies before us ? The pow'r difplay'd in Gage's banners Shall cut Amer'can lands to manors, And o'er our happy conquer'd ground Difpenfe eftates and titles round. Behold, the world fhall Hare at new fetts Of home-made earls in Maflachufetts 76 ; Admire, array'd in ducal taffels, Your Ol'vers, Hutchinfons and Vaffals 77 ; See join'd in minifterial work His grace of Albany and York 78 ! What Lordlhips from each carv'd eftate, On our New- York AfTembly wait ! What titled Jauncys 79 , Gales 80 and Billops 81 ; Lord Brulh 82 , Lord V/ilkins 83 and Lord Philips 84 ! In wide-fleev'd pomp of godly guife, What folemn rows of bifhops rife ! Aloft a card'nal's hat is fpread O'er punfter Cooper's 85 rev'rend head ! In 78 M'Fingal: [canto In Vardell S6 , that poetic zealot, I view a lawn-bedizen'd prelate ! While mitres fall, as 'tis their duty, On heads of Chandler and Auchmuty 87 ! Knights, vifcounts, barons fhall ye meet As thick as pavements in the ftreet ! Ev'n I perhaps, heav'n fpeed my claim, Shall fix a Sir before my name. For titles all our foreheads ache ; For what bleft changes can they make ! Place rev'rence, grace and excellence Where neither claim'd the lead pretence ; Transform by patent's magic words Men, likeft devils, into Lords ; Whence commoners to peers tranflated Are justly faid to be created 83 ! Now where commiffioners ye faw Shall boards of nobles deal you law ! Long-robed comptrollers judge your rights, And tide-waiters ftart up in knights ! While Whigs fubdued in flavifh awe, Our wood fhall hew, our water draw, And second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m. 79 And blcfs that mildnefs, when part hope, Which fav'd their necks from noofe of rope. For as to gain affiftance we Defign their Negroes to fet free ; For Whigs, when we enough fhall bang 'em, Perhaps 'tis better not to hang 'em ; Except their chiefs ; the vulgar knaves Will do more good preferv'd for flaves." " 'Tis well, Honorius cried, your fcheme Has painted out a pretty dream. We can't confute your fecond fight ; We fhall be flaves and you a knight : Thefe things muft come ; but I divine They'll come not in your day, or mine. But oh, my friends, my brethren, hear, And turn for once th' attentive ear. Ye fee how prompt to aid our woes, The tender mercies of our foes ; Ye fee with what unvaried rancour Still for our blood their minions hanker, Nor aught can fate their mad ambition, From us, but death, or worfe, fubmiifion. Shall 80 M ' F i n g a l : [canto Shall thefe then riot in our fpoil, Reap the glad harveft of our toil, Rife from their country's ruin proud, And roll their chariot wheels in blood ? And can ye fleep while high outfpread Hangs defolation o'er your head ? See Gage with inaufpicious liar Has oped the gates of civil war ; When ftr'eams of gore from freemen flain, Encrimfon'd Concord's fatal plain ; Whofe warning voice with awful found, Still cries, like Abel's from the ground, And heav'n, attentive to its call, Shall doom the proud oppreflbr's fall 89 . Rife then, ere ruin fwift furprize, To victory, to vengeance rife ! Hark, how the diftant din alarms ! The echoing trumpet breathes, to arms ; From provinces remote, afar, The fons of glory rouze to war ; 'Tis freedom calls ; th' enraptur'd found The Apalachian hills rebound 90 ; The second.] The Town-Meeting, p. m The Georgian fhores her voice fhall hear 91 , And ftart from lethargies of fear. From the parch'd zone, with glowing ray, Where pours the fun intenfer day, To mores where icy waters roll, And tremble to the dufky pole, Infpir'd by freedom's heav'nly charms, United nations wake to arms. The ftar of conqueft lights their way, And guides their vengeance on their prey — Yes, tho' tyrannic force oppofe, Still (hall they triumph o'er their foes, Till heav'n the happy land fhall blefs, With fafety, liberty and peace. And ye whofe fouls of daftard mould Start at the brav'ry of the bold ; To love your country who pretend, Yet want all fpirit to defend ; Who feel your fancies fo prolific, Engend'ring vifion'd whims terrific, O'er-run with horrors of coercion, Fire, blood and thunder in reverfion, King's 82 M ' F I N G A L : [CANTf King's ftandards, pill'ries, confifcations, And Gage's fcarecrow proclamations 92 , With all the trumpery of fear ; Hear bullets whizzing in your rear ; Who fcarce could rouze, if caught in fray, Prefence of mind to run away ; See nought but halters rife to view In all your dreams (and dreams are true); ■ And while thefe phantoms haunt your brains, Bow down the willing neck to chains ; Heav'ns ! are ye fons of fires fo great, Immortal in the fields of fate, Who brav'd all deaths by land or fea, Who bled, who conquer'd to be free ! Hence, coward fouls, the word difgrace Of our forefathers' valiant race ; Hie homeward from the glorious field ; There turn the wheel, the diftafr wield ; ' Aft what ye are, nor dare to ftain The warrior's arms with touch profane : There beg your more heroic wives To guard your children and your lives ; Beneath second.] The Town-Meeting, p.m. 83 Beneath their aprons find a fcreen, Nor dare to mingle more with men." As thus he laid, the Tories' anger Could now reftrain itfelf no longer, Who tried before by many a freak, or Infulting noife, to Hop the fpeaker ; Swung th' unoil'd hinge of each pew-door ; Their feet kept muffling on the floor ; Made their disapprobation known By many a murmur, hum and groan, That to his fpeech fupplied the place Of counterpart in thorough-bafe : As bag-pipes, while the tune they breathe, Still drone and grumble underneath ; Or as the fam'd Demoilhenes Harangued the rumbling of the feas, Held forth with eloquence full grave To audience loud of wind and wave 93 ; And had a (tiller congregation Than Tories are to hear th' oration. But now the florin grew high and louder As nearer thunderings of a cloud are^ And 84 M'Fingal: [canto And ev'ry foul with heart and voice Supplied his quota of the noife ; Each liftening ear was fet on torture Each Tory belPwing out, to order ; And fome, with tongue not low or weak, Were clam'ring fait, for leave to fpeak ; The moderator, with great vi'lence, The cufhion thump'd with " Silence, filence ; " The conftable to ev'ry prater BawPd out, " Pray hear the moderator 1 ' 4 ; " Some call'd the vote, and fome in turn Were fcreaming high, " Adjourn, adjourn : " Not chaos heard fuch jars and dailies When all the el'ments fought for places. Each bludgeon foon for blows was tim'd ; Each fist Hood ready cock'd and prim'd ; The ftorm each moment louder grew ; His fword the great M'Fingal drew, Prepar'd in either chance to fhare, To keep the peace, or aid the war. Nor lack'd they each poetic being, Whom bards alone are fkill'd in feeing ; Plum'd second.] The Town-Meeting, p.m. 85 Plum'd Victory Hood perch'd on high, Upon the pulpit-canopy 93 . To join, as is her cuftom tried, Like Indians, on the flrongeft fide ; The Deftinies with fhears and diftaff, Drew near their threads of life to twill off 96 ; The Furies 'gan to feaft on blows 91 , And broken heads or bloody nofe ; When on a fudden from without Arofe a loud terrific fhout ; And ftrait the people all at once heard Of tongues an univerfal concert : Like ^Efop's times, as fable runs, When ev'ry creature talk'd at once 98 , Or like the variegated gabble That craz'd the carpenters of Babel 99 . Each party foon forgot the quarrel, And let the other go on parole ; Eager to know what fearful matter Had conjur'd up fuch gen'ral clatter ; And left the church in thin array, As tho' it had been lecture-day 10 °. Our 86 M* Fin gal: [canto Our 'Squire M'Fingal ftraitway beckon'd The conftable to Hand his fecond, And Tallied forth with afpeft fierce The crowd aflembled to difperfe. The moderator out of view Beneath a bench had lain perdue ; Peep'd up his head to view the fray, Beheld the wranglers run away, And left alone with folemn face, Adjourn'd them without time or place. END of CANTO Second - —im'mm'mmam mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm m M'FINGAL : CANTO THIRD O R The LIBERTY POLE. ^^TOW arm'd with minifterial ire, Fierce Tallied forth our loyal 'Squire, And on his ftriding fteps attends, His defp'rate clan of Tory friends ; When fudden met his angry eye, A pole afcending thro' the fky, Which num'rous throngs of Whiggifh race Were raifing in the market-place ' ; Not higher fchool-boys kites afpire, Or royal mail or country fpire, Like fpears at Brobdignagian tilting 2 > Or Satan's walking-ftaff in Milton 3 ) And 88 M ' F I N G A l : [canto And on its top the flag unfurl'd, Waved triumph o'er the proflrate world, Infcribed with inconfiftent types Of liberty and thirteen {tripes 4 . Beneath, the croud without delay, The dedication-rites eflay, And gladly pay in antient fafhion, The ceremonies of libation ; While brifkly to each patriot lip Walks eager round th' infpiring flip 5 : Delicious draught, whofe pow'rs inherit The quinteflence of public fpirit ! Which whofo taftes, perceives his mind To nobler politics refined, Or rouz'd for martial controverfy, As from transforming cups of Circe b ; Or warm'd with Homer's ne&ar'd liquor, That fill'd the veins of gods with ichor 7 . At hand for new fupplies in ftore, The tavern opes its friendly door, Whence to and fro the waiters run, Like bucket-men at fires in town*. Then third. ] The Liberty Pole. 89 Then with three fhouts that tore the fky, 'Tis confecrate to Liberty ; To guard it from th' attacks of Tories, A grand committee cull'd of four is, Who foremoft on the patriot fpot, Had brought the flip and paid the fhot. By this, M'Fingal with his train, Advanc'd upon th' adjacent plain, And fierce with loyal rage poffefs'd, Pour'd forth the zeal, that fired his breaft. " What madbrain'd rebel gave commifTion, To raife this Maypole 9 of fedition ! Like Babel rear'd by bawling throngs, With like confufion too of tongues 10 , To point at heav'n and fummon down, The thunders of the Britifh crown 11 ? Say will this paltry pole fecure Your forfeit heads from Gage's pow'r? Attack'd by heroes brave and crafty, Is this to fland your ark of fafety ? Or driv'n by Scottifh laird and laddie 12 , Think ye to reft beneath its fhadow ? When 9 o M'Fingal: [canto When bombs, like fiery ferpents, fly And balls move hiffing thro' the Iky, Will this vile pole, devote to freedom, Save like the Jewifh pole in Edom ; Or, like the brazen fnake of Mofes 13 , Cure your crack't fkulls and batter'd nofes ? Ye dupes to ev'ry factious rogue, Or tavernprating demagogue, Whofe tongue but rings, with found more full, On th' empty drumhead of his fkull, Behold you know not what noify fools Ufe you, worfe fimpletons, for tools ? For Liberty in your own by-fenfe Is but for crimes a patent licence ; To break of law th' Egyptian yoke, And throw the world in common flock, Reduce all grievances and ills To Magna Charta 14 of your wills, Eftablifh cheats and frauds and nonfenfe, Fram'd by the model of your confcience, Cry juftice down, as out of fafhion And fix its fcale of depreciation 10 , Defy third.] The Liberty Pole. 91 Defy all creditors to trouble ye, And pafs new years of jewifh jubilee ; Drive judges out, like Aaron's calves, By jurifdictions of white Haves 17 , And make the bar and bench and fteeple, Submit t' our fov'reign Lord, the people ; AfTure each knave his whole afTets, By gen'ral amnelty of debts ; By plunder rife to pow'r and glory, And brand all property as tory 18 ; Expofe all wares to lawful feizures Of mobbers and monopolizers ; Break heads and windows and the peace, For your own int'refl and increafe ; Difpute and pray and fight and groan, For public good, and mean your own ; Prevent the laws, by fierce attacks, From quitting fcores upon your backs, Lay your old dread, the gallows, low, And feize the flocks 19 your antient foe ; And turn them, as convenient engines To wreak your patriotic vengeance ; While 9 2 M'Fingal: [canto While all, your claims who underftand, Confefs they're in the owner's hand : And when by clamours and confufions, Your freedom's' grown a public nuifance, Cry, Liberty, with pow'rful yearning, As he does, fire, whofe houfe is burning, Tho' he already has much more, Than he can find occafion for. While every dunce, that turns the plains Tho' bankrupt in eftate and brains, By this new light transform'd to traitor, Forfakes his plow to turn dictator, Starts an haranguing chief of Whigs, And drags you by the ears, like pigs. All blufter arm'd with fa&ious licence, Transform'd at once to politicians ; Each leather-apron'd clown grown wife, Prefents his forward face t' advife, And tatter'd lcgiflators meet From ev'ry workfhop thro' the ftreet ; His goofe the tailor finds new ufe in, To patch and turn the conftitution ; The third.] The- Liberty Pole. 93 The blackfmith comes with fledge and grate, To ironbind the wheels of ftate ; The quack forbears his patient's foufe, To purge the Council and the Houfe, The tinker quits his molds and doxies, To call afTembly-men at proxies 20 . From dunghills deep of fable hue, Your dirtbred patriots fpring to view, To wealth and pow'r and penfion rife, Like new-wing'd maggots chang'd to flies ; And fluttring round in proud parade Strut in the robe, or gay cockade. See Arnold quits for ways more certain, His bankrupt perjuries for his fortune, Brews rum no longer in his ftore, jockey and fkipper now no more ; Forfakes his warehoufes and docks, And writs of flander for the pox, And purg'd by patriotifm from fhame, Grows Gen'ral of the foremoft name 51 . Hiatus 22 . For 9+ M ' F I N G A l : [canto For in this ferment of the ftream, The dregs have work'd up to the brim, And by the rule of topfyturvys, The fkum Hands fwelling on the furface. You've caus'd your pyramid t' afcend And fet it on the little end ; Like Hudibras 23 , your empire's made, Whofe crupper had o'ertopped his head ; You've pufh'd and turn'd the whole world up- Side down and got yourfelves a-top : While all the great ones of your ftate, Are crufh'd beneath the pop'lar weight, Nor can you boaft this prefent hour, The fhadow of the form of pow'r. For what's your Congrefs, or its end ? A power t' advife and recommend ; To call for troops, adjuft your quotas, And yet no foul is bound to notice" 4 ; To pawn your faith to th' utmoft limit, But cannot bind you to redeem it% And when in want no more in them lies, Than begging of your State-Aflemblies ; Can third.] The Liberty Pole. 95 Can utter oracles of dread, Like friar Bacon's brazen head 26 , But fhould a fattion e'er difpute 'em, Has ne'er an arm to execute 'em. As tho' you chofe fupreme dictators, , And put them under confervators ; You've but purfued the felffame way, With Shakefpeare's Trinclo in the play 2T , " You fhall be viceroys here, 'tis true, But we'll be viceroys over you." What wild confufion hence mull enfue, Tho' common danger yet cements you ; So fome wreck'd veflel, all in matters, Is held up by furrounding waters, But flranded, when the prefTure ceafes, Falls by its rottennefs to pieces. And fall it mull — if wars were ended, You'll ne'er have fenfe enough to mend it ; But creeping on with low intrigues Like vermin of an hundred legs 23 , Will find as fhort a life affign'd, As all things elfe of reptile kind. Your 96 M'Fingal: [canto Your Commonwealth's a common harlot, The property of ev'ry varlet, Which now in tafle and full employ, All forts admire, as all enjoy ; But foon a batter'd flrumpet grown, You'll curfe arid drum her out of town. Such is the government you chofe, For this you bade the world be foes, For this fo mark'd for dhTolution, You fcorn the Britifh conftitution" 9 , That conilitution, form'd by fages, The wonder of all modern ages : Which owns no failure in reality, Except corruption and venality ; And only proves the adage juft, That bell things fpoil'd corrupt to worft. So man fupreme in mortal flation, And mighty lord of this creation, When once his corfe is dead as herring, Becomes the moll offenfive carrion, And fooner breeds the plague, 'tis found, Than all beafts rotting 'bove the ground. Yet third.] The Liberty Pole. 97 Yet for this gov'rnment, to difmay us, You've call'd up anarchy from chaos, With all the followers of her fchool, Uproar and rage and wild mifrule ; For whom this rout of Whigs diftracled And ravings dire of ev'ry crack'd head ; Thefe new-cart legiflative engines Of county-mufters and conventions, Committees vile of correfpondence 30 , And mobs, whofe tricks have almoft undone 's ; While reafon fails to check your courfe, And loyalty's kick'd out of doors, And folly, like inviting landlord, Hoifts on your poles her royal ftandard. While the king's friends in doleful dumps, Have worn their courage to the flumps, And leaving George in fad difailer, Moil finfully deny their mailer. What furies raged when you in fea, In fhape of Indians drown'd the tea 31 , When your gay fparks, fatigued to watch it 32 , Affirmed the moggifon 33 and hatchet. With 98 M ' F I N G A l : [canto With wampom'd blankets hid their laces 34 , And like their fweethearts, primed their faces 35 : While not a redcoat 35 dar'd oppofe, And fcarce a Tory fhow'd his nofe, While Hutchinfon for fure retreat, Manouvred to his country feat, And thence affrighted in the fads, Stole off bareheaded thro' the woods 37 ! Have you not rous'd your mobs to join, And make Mandamus-men refign 38 , Call'd forth each duffil-drefs'd curmudgeon, With dirty trowfers and white bludgeon, Forc'd all our Councils thro' the land, To yield their necks to your command 39 ; While palenefs marks their late difgraces Thro' all their rueful length of faces ? Have you not caufed as woful work, In loyal city of New York 40 , When all the rabble well cockaded, In triumph thro' the ftreets paraded ; And mobb'd the Tories, feared their fpoufes, And ranfack'd all the cuftom-houfes 41 , Made third.] The Liberty Pole. 99 Made fuch a tumult, blufter, jarring, That mid the clafh of tempefts warring, Smith's weathercock 42 with veers forlorn, Could hardly tell which way to turn ; Burnt effigies of th' higher powers 43 , Contriv'd in planetary hours, As witches with clay-images, Deftroy or torture whom they pleafe ; Till fired with rage, th' ungrateful club Spared not your belt, friend, Belzebub 44 , O'erlook'd his favours and forgot The rev'rence due his cloven foot, And in the felffame furnace frying, Burn'd him and North and Bute and Tryon 45 r Did you not in as vile and mallow way, Fright our poor Philadelphian, Galloway, Your Congrefs when the daring ribald Belied, berated and befcribbled ? What ropes and halters did you fend, Terrific emblems of his end, Till leaft he'd hang in more than effigy, Fled in a fog the trembling refugee 46 ? Now IOO M'Fingal : [canto Now rifing in progreffion fatal, ^ Have you not ventur'd to give battle ? When treafon chaced our heroes troubled, With rufty gun and leathern doublet, Turn'd all ftonewalls and groves and bufhes, To batt'ries arm'd with blunderbufles, And with deep wounds that fate portend, Gaul'd many a reg'lar's latter end, Drove them to Bofton, as in jail, Confined without mainprize or bail 47 . Were not thefe deeds enough betimes, To heap the meafure of your crimes, But in this loyal town and dwelling, You raife thefe enfigns of rebellion ? 'Tis done ; fair Mercy fhuts her door ; And Vengeance now mall fleep no moie 4s ; Rife then, my friends, in terror rife, And wipe this fcandal from the fkies ! You'll fee their Dagon 49 , tho' well jointed, Will fink before the Lord's anointed 50 , And like old Jericho's proud wall, Before our ram's horns proftrate fall 51 ." This third.] The Liberty Pole. ioi This faid, our 'Squire, yet undifmay'd, Call'd forth the Conftable to aid, And bade him read in nearer ftation, The riot-a6l and proclamation ; Who now advancing tow'rd the ring, Began, " Our fov'reign Lord the King " — 52 When thoufand clam'rous tongues he hears, And clubs and Hones affail his ears ; To fly was vain, to fight was idle, By foes encompafs'd in the middle ; In ftratagem his aid he found, And fell right craftily to ground ; Then crept to feek an hiding place, 'Twas all he could, beneath a brace ; * Where foon the conq'ring crew efpied him, And where he lurk'd, they caught and tied him. At once with refolution fatal, Both Whigs and Tories rufh'd to battle ; Inftead of weapons, either band Seiz'd on fuch arms, as came to hand. And as fam'd Ovid paints th* adventures Of wrangling Lapithae and Centaurs 53 , Who 102 M * F i n g a l : [canto Who at their feaft, by Bacchus 54 led, Threw bottles at each other's head, And thefe arms failing in their fcuffles, Attack'd with handirons, tongs and fhovels : So clubs and billets, flaves and ftones Met fierce, encount'ring ev'ry fconcc, And cover'd o'er with knobs and pains Each void receptacle for brains ; Their clamours rend the hills around, And earth rebellows with the found ; And many a groan increas'd the din From broken nofe and batter'd fhin. M'Fingal rifing at the word, Drew forth his old militia fword ; Thrice cried, " King George," as erft in diftrefs Romancing heroes did their miftrefs, And brandifhing the blade in air, Struck terror thro' th' oppofing war. The Whigs, unfafe within the wind Of fuch commotion fhrunk behind. With whirling Heel around addrefs'd, Fierce thro' their thickeft throng he prefs'd, (Who THIRD .] The Liberty Pole. 103 (Who roll'd on either fide in arch, Like Red-fea waves in Ifrael's march) And like a meteor rufhing through, Struck on their pole a vengeful blow. Around, the Whigs, of clubs and ftones Difcharg'd whole vollies in platoons, That o'er in whittling terror fly, But not a foe dares venture nigh. And now perhaps with conqueft crown'd, Our 'Squire had fell'd their pole to ground ; Had not fome Pow'r, a Whig at heart, Defcended down and took their part ; (Whether 'twere Pallas 55 , Mars 56 , or Iris 57 , 'Tis fcarce worth while to make enquiries) Who at the nick of time alarming, Aflumed the graver form of Chairman ; Addrefs'd a Whig, in ev'ry fcene The ftouteft wreftler on the green, And pointed where the fpade was found, •* Late ufed to fix their pole in ground, And urg'd with equal arms and might To dare our 'Squire to fingle fight 58 . The 104 M f F i n g a l : [canto The Whig thus arm'd, untaught to yield, Advanc'd tremendous to the field ; Nor did M'Fingal fhun the foe, But flood to brave the defp'rate blow ; While all the party gaz'd fufpended, To fee the deadly combat ended. And Jove in equal balance weigh'd The fword againft the brandifh'd fpade, He weigh'd ; but lighter than a dream, The fword flew up and kick'd the beam, Our 'Squire on tiptoe rifing fair, Lifts high a noble flroke in air, Which hung not, but like dreadful engines Defcended on the foe in vengeance. But ah, in danger with difhonor The fword perfidious fails its owner ; That fword, which oft had flood its ground By huge trainbands encompafs'd round, Or on the^bench, with blade right loyal 59 , Had won the day at many a trial, Of flones and clubs had brav'd th' alarms, Shrunk from thefe new Vulcanian arms 6 ". The third.] The Liberty Pole. 105 The fpade fo tempcr'd from the fledge, Nor keen nor folid harm'd its edge, Now met it from his arm of might Defcending with fteep force to finite 01 ; The blade fnapp'd fhort — and from his hand With ruft embrown'd the glitt'ring fand. Swift turn'd M'Fingal at the view, And call'd for aid th' attendant crew, In vain ; the Tories all had run, When fcarce the fight was well begun ; Their fetting wigs he faw decreas'd Far in th' horizon tow'rd the weft. Amaz'd he view'd the fhameful fight, And faw no refuge but in flight : But age unweildy check'd his pace, Tho' fear had wing'd his flying race ; For not a trifling prize at ftake ; No lefs than great M'Fingal's back. With legs and arms he work'd his courfe, Like rider that outgoes his horfe, And labour'd hard to get away, as Old Satan ftruggling on thro' chaos 65 : Till 1 06 M'Fingal: [canto Till looking back he fpied in rear The fpade-arm'd chief advanc'd too near. Then ftopp'd and feiz'd a ftone that lay, An antient land-mark near the way ; Nor mall we, as old Bards have done, Affirm it weigh'd an hundred ton 63 : But fuch a ftone as at a ftiift A modern might fuffice to lift, Since men, to credit their enigmas, Are dwindled down to dwarfs and pigmies, And giants exiled with their cronies, To Brobdingnags and Patagonias 64 . But while our hero turn'd him round, And ftoop'd to raife it from the ground, The deadly fpade difcharg'd a blow Tremendous on his rear below : His bent knee fail'd, and void of ftrength, Stretch'd on the ground his manly length ; Like antient oak o'erturn'd he lay, Or tow'rs to tempefts fall'n a prey, And more things elfe — but all men know 'em, If flightiy vers'd in Epic Poem. At third.] The Liberty Pole. 107 At once the crew, at this fad crifis, Fall on and bind him ere he rifes, And with loud fhouts and joyful foul Conduct him pris'ner to the pole. When now the Mob in lucky hour, Had got their en'mies in their pow'r, They firft proceed by wife command To take the conftable in hand. Then from the pole's fublimeft top They fpeeded to let down the rope, At once its other end in hafte bind, And make it faft upon his waiflband, Till like the earth, as ftretch'd on tenter, He hung felf-balanc'd on his center 65 . Then upwards all hands hoifting fail, They fwung him, like a keg of ale, Till to the pinnacle fo fair, He rofe like meteor in the air. As Socrates of old at firft did To aid philofophy get hoifted, And found his thoughts flow ftrangely clear, Swung in a bafket in mid air 66 : Our 1 08 M'Fingal: [canto Our culprit thus in purer fky, With like advantage rais'd his eye ; And looking forth in profpecl: wide His Tory errors clearly fpied, And from his elevated ftation, With bawling voice began addreffing. " Good gentlemen and friends and kin, For heav'n's fake hear, if not for mine ! I here renounce the Pope, the Turks, The King, the Devil and all their works ; And will, fet me but once at eafe, Turn Whig or Chriftian, what you please ; And always mind your laws as juftly ; Should I live long as old Methus'lah, I'll never join with Britifh rage, Nor help Lord North, or Gen'ral Gage, Nor lift my gun in future fights, Nor take away your charter'd rights, Nor overcome your new-rais'd levies, Deilroy your towns, nor burn your navies, Nor cut your poles down while I've breath, Tho' rais'd more thick than hatchel-teeth 67 : But third.] The Liberty Pole. 109 But leave king George and all his elves To do their conq'ring work themfelves." This faid, they lower'd him down in ftate, Spread at all points, like falling cat ; But took a vote firft on the queftion, That they'd accept this full confeflion, And to their fellowfhip and favor, Reftore him on his good behaviour. Not fo, our 'Squire fubmits to rule, But flood heroic as a mule. " You'll find it all in vain, quoth he, To play your rebel tricks on me. All punifhments the world can render, Serve only to provoke th' offender; The will's confirm'd by treatment horrid, As hides grow harder when they're curried. No man e'er felt the halter draw, With good opinion of the law ; Or held in method orthodox His love of juftice in the flocks 6S ; Or no M'Fingal: [canto Or faiFd to lofe by fheriff's fhears At once his loyalty and ears 69 . Have you made Murray 10 look lefs big, Or fmoak'd old Williams to a Whig"? Did our mobb'd Oliver 72 quit his ftation, Or heed his vows of resignation ? Has Rivington, in dread of ftripes, Ceas'd lying fince you Hole his types 13 ? And can you think my faith will alter, By tarring, whipping, or the halter ? I'll Hand the worft ; for recompence I truft King George and Providence. And when, our conqueft gain'd, I come, Array'd in law and terror home, You'll rue this inaufpicious morn, And curfe the day you e'er were born, In Job's high ftyle of imprecations, With all his plagues, without his patience." Meanwhile befide the pole, the guard A Bench of Juftice had prepar'd, Where fitting round in awful fort, The grand Committee hold their court 74 ; While third. ] The Liberty Pole. hi While all the crew in filent awe, Wait from their lips the lore of law. Few moments with deliberation, They hold the folemn confultation, When foon in judgment all agree, And Clerk declares the dread decree ; " That 'Squire M'Fingal having grown, The vileft Tory in the town, And now on full examination, Convicted by his own confeflion, Finding no tokens of repentance, This Court proceed to render fentence : That firft the Mob a flip-knot fmgle Tie round the neck of faid M'Fingal ; And in due form do tar him next, And feather, as the law dire&s ; Then thro' the town attendant ride him, In cart with Conftable befide him, And having held him up to fhame, Bring to the pole from whence he came 7 V Forthwith the croud proceed to deck With halter'd noofe M'Fingal's neck, ' While I 12 M 'Fin gal : [canto While he, in peril of his foul, Stood tied half-hanging to the pole ; Then lifting high the pond'rous jar, Pour'd o'er his head the fmoaking tar : With lefs profufion erft was fpread The Jewish oil on royal head 76 , That down his beard and veftments ran, And cover'd all his outward man. As when (fo Claudian fings) the Gods And earth-born giants fell at odds", The flout Enceladus 18 in malice Tore mountains up to throw at Pallas ; And as he held them o'er his head, The river from their fountains fed, Pour'd down his back its copious tide, And wore its channels in his hyde : So from the high rais'd urn the torrents, Spread down his fide their various currents ; His flowing wig, as next the brim, Firft met and drank the fable ftream ; Adown his vifage item and grave, Roll'd and adhered the vifcid wave ; With third.] The Liberty Pole. 113 With arms depending as he flood, Each cuff capacious holds the flood ; From nofe and chin's remoteft end, The tarry icicles depend ; Till all o'erfpread, with colors gay- He glitter'd to the weftern ray, Like fleet-bound trees in wintry fkies, Or Lapland idol carv'd in ice. And now the feather-bag difplay'd, Is wav'd in triumph o'er his head, And fpreads him o'er with feathers miffive, And down upon the tar adhefive : Not Maia's fon, with wings for ears 79 , Such plumes around his vifage wears ; Nor Milton's fix wing'd angel 80 gathers, Such fuperfluity of feathers. Till all compleat appears our 'Squire Like Gorgon or Chimera dire 81 ; Nor more could boaft on Plato's plan To rank amid the race of man, Or prove his claim to human nature, As a two-legg'd, unfeather'd creature 8 ?. Then II4 M' Fin gal: [canto Then on the two-wheel'd car of ftate, They rais'd our grand Duumvirate 83 . And as at Rome a like committee, That found an owl within their city, With folemn rites and fad procemons, At ev'ry fhrine perform'd luftrations ; And leaft infe&ion mould abound From prodigy with face fo round, All Rome attends him thro' the ftreet, In triumph to his country-feat 84 ; With like devotion all the choir Paraded round our feather'd 'Squire ; In front the martial mufic comes Of horns and fiddles, fifes and drums, With jingling found of carriage bells, And treble creak of rufted wheels ; Behind, the croud in lengthen'd row, With grave proceffion clofed the fhow ; And at fit periods ev'ry throat Combined in univerfal fhout, And hail'd great Liberty in chorus, Or bawl'd, Confufion to the Tories. Not third.] The Liberty Pole. 115 Not louder florin the welkin braves, From clamors of conflicting waves ; Lefs dire in Lybian wilds the noife When rav'ning lions lift their voice ; Or triumphs at town-meetings made, On paffing votes to reg'late trade 85 . Thus having borne them round the town, Laft at the pole they fet them down, And tow'rd the tavern take their way, To end in mirth the feilal day. And now the Mob difpers'd and gone, Left 'Squire and Conflable alone. The Conflable in rueful cafe Lean'd fad and folemn o'er a brace. And fail befide him, cheek by jowl, Stuck 'Squire M'Fingal 'gainfl the pole, Glued by the tar t' his rear applied, Like barnacle 80 on veffel's fide. But tho' his body lack'd phyfician, His fpirit was in worfe condition. He u6 M'Fingal: [canto He found his fears of whips and ropes, By many a drachm outweigh'd his hopes. As men in goal without mainprize, View ev'ry thing with other eyes, And all goes wrong in church and ftate, Seen thro' perfpeftive of the grate : So now M'Fingal's fecond-fight Beheld all things in difPrent light ; His vifual nerve, well purg'd with tar, Saw all the coming fcenes of war. As his prophetic foul grew ftronger, He found he could hold in no longer ; Firft from the pole, as fierce he fhook, His wig from pitchy durance broke, His mouth unglued, his feathers flutter'd, His tarr'd fkirts crack'd, and thus he utter'd, " Ah, Mr. Conftable, in vain We ftrive 'gainft wind and tide and rain ! Behold my doom ! this feather'd omen Portends what difmal times are coming. Now future fcenes before my eyes, And fecond-fighted forms arife ; I hear third.] The Liberty Pole. ii I hear a voice that calls away, And cries, the Whigs will win the day 87 ; My beck'ning Genius gives command, And bids us fly the fatal land ; Where changing name and confutation, Rebellion turns to revolution 83 , While Loyalty opprefs'd in tears, Stands trembling for its neck and ears. Go, fummon all our brethren greeting, To mufter at our ufual meeting. There my prophetic voice mall warn 'em, Of all things future that concern 'em, And fcenes difclofe on which, my friend, Their conduct, and their lives depend : There I — but firft 'tis more of ufe, From this vile pole to fet me loofe ; Then go with cautious Heps and fteady, While I fleer home and make all ready." END of CANTO Third. M'FINGAL : CANTO FOURTH OR The VISION. '^TOW night came down, and rofe full foon That patronefs of rogues, the Moon ; Beneath whofe kind, protecting ray Wolves, brute and human, prowl for prey. The honeft world all fnored in chorus, While owls, and ghofts and thieves and Tories, Whom erft the mid-day fun had aw'd, Crept from their lurking holes abroad. On cautious hinges, flow and {tiller Wide oped the great M'Fingal's cellar l , Where lhut from prying eyes in clufter, The Tory Pandemonium 2 mufter. Their fourth.] The Vision. 119 Their chiefs all fitting round defcried are, On kegs of ale and feats of cyder ; When firft M'Fingal dimly feen Rofe folemn from the turnep-bin 3 . Nor yet his form had wholly loft The original brightnefs it could boaft 4 , Nor lefs appear'd than Juftice Quorum, In feather'd majefty before 'em 5 . Adown his tarftreak'd vifage, clear Fell glift'ning fail th' indignant tear, And thus his voice, in mournful wife, Purfued the prologue of his fighs. " Brethren and friends, the glorious band Of loyalty in rebel land ! It was not thus you've feen me fitting Return'd in triumph from town-meeting, When bluftring Whigs were put to ftand, And votes obey'd my guiding hand, And new commiffions pleas'd my eyes ; Bleft days, but ah, no more to rife ! Alas, againft my better light And optics fure of fecond-fight 6 , My I20 M'Fingal: [canto My ftubborn foul in error ftrong, Had faith in Hutchinfon 7 too long. See what brave trophies ftill we bring From all our battles for the king ; And yet thefe plagues now pall before us, Are but our entring wedge of forrows. I fee in glooms tempeftuous Hand The cloud impending o'er the land ; That cloud, which ftill beyond their hopes Serves all our orators with tropes, Which tho' from our own vapors fed, Shall point its thunders on our head ! I fee the Mob, beflipp'd 8 in taverns, Hunt us, like wolves, thro' wilds and caverns ! What dungeons rife t' alarm our fears, What horfewhips whiftle round our ears ! Tar yet in embryo in the pine 9 Shall run, on Tories backs to mine ; Trees rooted fair in groves of fallows Are growing for our future gallows ; And geefe unhatch'd, when pluck'd in fray, Shall rue the feath'ring of that day 10 . For fourth.] The Vision. 121 For me, before thefe fatal days I mean to fly th' accurfed place, And follow omens, which of late Have warn'd me of impending fate ; Yet pafs'd unnoticed o'er my view, Till fad conviction proved them true ; As prophecies of beft intent, Are only heeded in th* event. For late in vifions of the night The gallows flood before my light ; I faw its ladder heav'd on end ; I faw the deadly rope defcend ; And m its noofe that wav'ring fwang, Friend Malcolm 11 hung, or feem'd to hang. How changed from him, who bold as lyon, Stood Aid-de-Camp to Governor Tryon, Made rebels vanifh once, like witches, And faved his life, but dropp'd his breeches 12 . I fcarce had made a fearful bow, And trembling afk'd him, " How d'ye do." When lifting up his eyes fo wide, His eyes alone, his hands were tied ; • With 122 M'Fingal: [canto With feeble voice, as fpirits ufe, Now almoft choak'd with gripe of noofe ; " Ah 13 fly, my friend, he cried, efcape, And keep yourfelf from this fad fcrape ; Enough you've talk'd and writ and plann'd ; The Whigs have got the upper hand. Dame Fortune's wheel has turn'd fo fhort, It plung'd us fairly in the dirt ; Could mortal arm our fears have ended, This arm (and shook it) had defended. But longer now 'tis vain to flay ; See ev'n the Reg'lars run away : Wait not till things grow defperater, For hanging is no laughing matter : This might your grandfires' fortunes tell you on Who both were hang'd the laft rebellion 14 ; Adventure then no longer ftay, But call your friends and run away. For lo, thro' deepeft glooms of night I come to aid thy fecond-fight, Difclofe the plagues that round us wait And wake the dark decrees of fate. Afcend fourth.] The Vision. 123 Afcend this ladder whence unfurl'd The curtain opes of t'other world, For here new worlds their fcenes unfold, Seen from this backdoor of the old 15 . As when iEneas 1B rifqued his life, Like Orpheus venturing for his wife 17 , And bore in fhow his mortal carcafe, Thro* realms of Erebus and Orcus 18 , Then in the happy fields Elyfian, Saw all his embryon fons in virion : As mown by great archangel, Michael, Old Adam faw the world's whole fequel, And from the mount's extended fpace, The rifing fortunes of his race 10 ; So from this flage fhalt thou behold, The war its coming fcenes unfold, Rais'd by my arm to meet thine eye ; My Adam, thou, thine Angel, I. But firft my pow'r for vifions bright, Mull cleanfe from clouds thy mental fight, Remove the dim fufFufions fpread, Which bribes and fal'ries there have bred ; And 1 24 M'Fingal: [canto And from the well of Bute infufe, Three genuine drops of Highland dews, To purge, like euphrafy and rue 20 , Thine eyes, for much thou haft to view. Now freed from Tory darknefs raife Thy head and fpy the coming days ; For lo before our fecond-fight, The Continent afcends in light ; From north to fouth what gath'ring fwarms, Increafe the pride of rebel arms ! Thro' ev'ry State our legions brave, Speed gallant marches to the grave, Of battling Whigs the frequent prize, While rebel trophies flain the fkies 21 . Behold o'er northern realms afar, Extend the kindling flames of war ! See fam'd St. John's and Montreal, Doom'd by Montgom'ry's arm to fall 22 ! Where Hudfon with majeflic fway, Thro' hills difparted plows his way ; Fate fpreads on Bemus' Heights alarms, And pours deftrudlion on our arms 23 ; There fourth.] The Vision. 125 There Bennington's, enfanguin'd plain 24 , And Stony-Point, the prize of Wayne 25 . Behold near Del'ware's icy roar, Where morning dawns on Trenton's ihore, While Heflians fpread their Chriftmas feafts, Rufh rude thele uninvited guefts ; Nor aught avail, to Whigs a prize, Their martial whifkers' grifly fize 26 . On Princeton plains our heroes yield, And Ipread in flight the vanquifh'd field, While fear to Mawhood's heels puts on Wings, wide as worn by Maia's fon 2T . Behold the Pennfylvanian more, Enrich'd with ftreams of Britifh gore 28 ; Where many a vet'ran chief in bed Of honor refts his flumbring head, And in foft vales in land of foes, Their wearied virtue finds repofe 29 . See plund'ring Dunmore's negro band Fly headlong from Virginia's ftrand 30 ; And far on fouthern hills our coufins, The Scotch McDonalds fall by dozens 31 ; Or 126 M i F I N G A l : [canto Or where King's Mountain lifts its head, Our ruin'd bands in triumph led 32 ! Behold o'er Tarlton's bluft'ring train, The Rebels ftretch the captive chain 33 ! Afar near Eutaw's fatal fprings Defcending VicYry fpreads her wings 34 ! Thro' all the land in various chace, We hunt the rainbow of fuccefs ; In vain ! their Chief fuperior ftill Eludes our force with Fabian fkill 35 , Or fwift defcending by furprize, Like Pruffia's eagle fweeps the prize." I look'd, nor yet, oppreft with fears, Gave credit to my eyes or ears, But held the views an empty dream, On Berkley's immaterial fcheme 3G ; And pondring fad with troubled breaft At length my rifmg doubts exprefs'd. " Ah whither, thus by rebels fmitten, Is fled th' omnipotence of Britain 37 , Or fail'd its ufual guard to keep, Gone truanting or fall'n afleep ; As fourth.] The Vision. 127 As Baal his prophets left confounded, And bawling vot'ries galh'd and wounded 3S ? Did not, retir'd to bow'rs Elyfian, Great Mars leave with her his commiffion, And Neptune erft in treaty free, Give up dominion o'er the fea 39 . ? Elfe where's the faith of famed orations 40 , Addrefs, debate and proclamations, Or courtly fermon, laureat ode, And ballads on the v/atry God 41 ; With whofe high /trains great George enriches His eloquence of gracious fpeeches 42 ? Not faithful to our Highland eyes, Thefe deadly forms of vifion rife ; But fure fome Whig-infpiring fprite Now palms delufion on our light. I'd fcarcely trull a tale fo vain, Should revelation prompt the ilrain, Or Offian's ghoft the fcenes rehearfe, In all the melody of Erfe." 43 " Too long, quoth Malcolm, with confufion You've dwelt already in delufion, As 128 M ' F I N G A l : [canto As Sceptics, of all fools the chief, Hold faith in creeds of unbelief. I come to draw thy veil a fide Of error, prejudice and pride. Fools love deception, but the wife Prefer fad truths to pleafmg lies. For know thofe hopes can ne'er fucceed That truft on Britain's breaking reed. For weak'ning long from bad to worfe By fatal atrophy of purfe, She feels at length with trembling heart, Her foes have found her mortal part. As famed Achilles, dipped by Thetis In Styx, as fung in antient ditties, Grew all cafeharden'd o'er like fteel, Invulnerable, fave his heel 44 , And laugh'd at fwords and fpears, as fquibs, And all difeafes, but the kibes 45 ; Yet met at laft his fatal wound, By Paris' arrow nail'd to ground 46 : So Britain's boafted ftrength deferts, In thefe her empire's utmoft fkirts, Remov'd fourth.] The Vision. 129 Remov'd beyond her fierce impreflions, And atmofphere of omniprefence ; Nor to thefe fhores remoter ends, Her dwarf omnipotence extends : Whence in this turn of things fo ftrange, . 'Tis time our principles to change. For vain that boafted faith, which gathers No perquifite, but tar and feathers, No pay, but Whig's infulting malice, And no promotion, but the gallows. I've long enough Hood firm and fteady, Half hang'd for loyalty already : And could I fave my neck and pelf I'd turn a flaming Whig myfelf, And quit this caufe and courfe and calling, Like rats that fly from houfe that's falling. But fince, obnoxious here to fate, This faving wifdom comes too late, Our nobleft hopes already croft, Our fal'ries gone, our titles loft, Doom'd to worfe fufF'rings from the mob Than Satan's furg'ries ufcd on Job 47 ; What I3 o M'Fingal: [canto What more remains but now with Height, What's left of us to fave by flight ? Now raife thine eyes for vifions true Again afcending wait thy view." I look'd and clad in early light, The fpires of Bofton rofe to fight ; The morn o'er eaftern hills afar, Illum'd the varying fcenes of war. Great Howe had long fince in the lap Of Loring taken out his nap, And with the fun's afcending ray, The cuckold came to take his pay 43 . When all th' encircling hills around, With inftantaneous breaftworks crown'd, With pointed thunders met his fight, By magic rear'd the former night. Each fummit, far as eye commands, Shone peopled with rebellious bands 49 . Aloft their tow'ring heroes rife, As Titans erft aifail'd the ikies 50 , Leagued with fuperior force to prove, The fcepter'd hand of Britifh Jove. Mounds fourth.] The Vision. 131 Mounds piled on hills afcended fair With batt'ries placed in middle air, That rais'd like angry clouds on high Seem'd like th' artill'ry of the fky, And hurl'd their fiery bolts amain, In thunder on the trembling plain. I faw along the proftrate ftrand. Our baffled Gen'rals quit the land, And fwift as frighted mermaids flee, T' our boafted element, the fea 51 ! Relign that long contefted fhore, Again the prize of rebel-power, And tow'rd their town of refuge fly, Like convict Jews condemn'd to die 53 . Then tow'rd the north, I turn'd my eyes, Where Saratoga's heights a rife, And faw our chofen vet'ran band, Defcend in terror o'er the land 53 ; T' oppofe this fury of alarms, Saw all New-England wake to arms, And ev'ry Yanky full of mettle, Swarm forth, like bees at found of kettle 54 . Not 132 M'Fingal: [canto Not Rome, when Tarquin raped Lucretia ,0 , Saw wilder muft'ring of militia. Thro' all the woods and plains of fight, What mortal battles fill'd my fight, While Britifh corfes ftrew'd the fhore, And Hudfon ting'd his ftreams with gore ! What tongue can tell the difmal day, Or paint the party-color'd fray ; When yeomen left their fields afar, To plow the crimfon plains of war ; When zeal to fwords transformed their fhares, And turn'd their pruning-hooks to fpears, Chang'd tailor's geefe to guns and ball, And ftretch'd to pikes the cobler's awl 50 ; While hunters fierce like mighty Nimrod, Made on our troops a daring inroad ; And levelling fquint on barrel round, Brought our beau-officers to ground 57 ; While rifle-frocks fent Gen'rals cap'ring, And redcoats fhrunk from leathern apron, And epaulette and gorget run From whinyard brown and rufty gun : While fourth.] The Vision. 133 While funburnt wigs in high command, Rufh furious on our frighted band, And antient beards and hoary hair, Like meteors ftream in troubled air 58 . With locks unfhorn not Samfon more Made ufelefs all the mow of war, Nor fought with alTes'jaw for rarity, With more fuccefs or Angularity 59 . I faw our vet'ran thoufands yield And pile their mufkets on the field, And peafant guards in rueful plight March off our captured bands from fight ; While ev'ry rebel-fife in play, To Yanky-doodle tun'd its lay, And like the mufic of the fpheres, Mellifluous footh'd their vanquifh'd ears 60 . " Alas, faid I, what baleful flar, Sheds fatal influence on the war, And who that chofen Chief of fame, That heads this grand parade of fhame ? " " There fee how fate, great Malcolm cried, Strikes with its bolts the tow'rs of pride. Behold : 3 + M'Fingal: [canto ,63 . Behold that martial Macaroni 61 , Compound of Phcebus and Bellona 6 ' 2 , With warlike fword and fingfong lay, Equipp'd ahke for feaft or fray, Where equal wit and valour join ; This, this is he, the famed Burgoyne' Who pawn'd his honor and commimon, To coax the Patriots to fubmimon, By fongs and balls fecure obedience, And dance the ladies to allegiance 64 . Oft his camp mufes he'll parade, At Bolton in the grand blockade, And well invoked with punch of arrack, Hold converfe fweet in tent or barrack, Infpired in more heroic fafhion, Both by his theme and fituation ; While farce and proclamation grand, Rife fair beneath his plaftic hand 65 . For genius fwells more ftrong and clear When clofe confin'd, like bottled beer : So Prior's wit gain'd greater pow'r, By infpiration of the tow'r 63 ; And fourth.] The Vision. 135 xA.nd Raleigh fall in prifon hurl'd Wrote all the hift'ry of the world 67 : So Wilkes grew, while in goal he lay, More patriotic ev'ry day, But found his zeal, when not confin'd, Soon link below the freezing point, And public Ipirit once fo fair, Evaporate in open air 6S . But thou, great favorite of Venus, By no fuch luck fhalt cramp thy genius ; Thy friendly liars till wars lhall ceafe, Shall ward th' illfortune of releafe, And hold thee faft in bonds not feeble, In good condition Hill to fcribble. Such merit fate lhall Ihield from firing, Bomb, carcafe, langridge and cold iron, Nor trulls thy doubly laurell'd head, To rude affaults of flying lead. Hence in this Saratogue retreat, For pure good fortune thou'lt be beat ; Nor taken oft, releas'd or refcued, Pafs for fmall change, like limple Prefcott 69 ; But 136 M'Fingal: [canto But captured there, as fates befall, Shalt fland thy hand for't, once for all. Then raife thy daring thoughts fublime, And dip thy conq'ring pen in rhyme, And changing war for puns and jokes, Write new Blockades and Maids of Oaks." "° This faid, he turn'd, and faw the tale, Had dyed my trembling cheeks with pale ; Then pitying in a milder vein Purfued the vifionary drain. " Too much perhaps hath pain'd your views Of vicVries gain'd by rebel crews ; Now fee the deeds not fmall or fcanty, Of Britifh Valor and Humanity ; And learn from this aufpicious fight, How England's fons and friends can fight ; In what dread fcenes their courage grows, And how they conquer all their foes." I look'd and faw in wintry fkies Our fpacious prison-walls arife, Where fourth.] The Vision. 137 Where Britons all their captives taming, Plied them with fcourging, cold and famine ; Reduced to life's concluding ftages, By noxious food and plagues contagious. Aloft the mighty Loring flood, And thrived, like Vampyre, on their blood, And counting all his gains arifing, Dealt daily rations out of poifon. Amid the dead that croud the fcene, The moving fkeletons were feen ". At hand our troops in vaunting drains, Infulted all their wants and pains, And turn'd on all the dying tribe, The bitter taunt and fcornful gibe : And Britifh officers of might, Triumphant at the joyful fight, O'er foes difarm'd with courage daring, Exhaufred all their tropes of fwearing. Around all itain'd with rebel blood, Like Milton's lazar houfe it Hood 72 , Where grim Defpair attended nurfe, And Death was Gov'rnor of the houfe. Amaz'd 138 M'Fingal: [canto Amaz'd I cried, ft Is this the way, That Britifh Valour wins the day ? " More had I faid, in flrains unwelcome, Till interrupted thus by Malcolm : " Blame not, quoth he, but learn the reafon Of this new mode of conq'ring treafon. 'Tis but a wife, politic plan, To root out all the rebel-clan ; (For furely treafon ne'er can thrive, Where not a foul is left alive :) A fcheme, all other chiefs to furpafs, And to do th' effectual work to purpofe. For war itfelf is nothing further, But th' art and myflery of murther 7- ', And who moll methods has efTay'd, Is the bell Gen'ral of the trade, And flands Death's Plenipotentiary, To conquer, poifon, flarve and bury. This Howe well knew, and thus began, (Defpifing Carlton's coaxing plan, Who kept his pris'ners well and merry, And dealt them food like Commiffary, And FOURTH.] T H E V I S I O N . I 39 And by paroles and ranfoms vain, Difmifs'd them all to fight again :) 74 Whence his firfl captives with great fpirit, He tied up for his troops to fire at 75 , And hoped they'd learn on foes thus taken, To aim at rebels without making. Then wife in ftratagem he plann'd The fure deftruction of the land, Turn'd famine, ficknefs and defpair, To ufeful enginry of war, Inftead of cannon, mufket, mortar, Ufed peftilence and death and torture, Sent forth the fmall pox and the greater 76 , To thin the land of ev'ry traitor, And order'd out with like endeavour, Detachments of the prifon-fever 77 ; Spread defolation o'er their head, And plagues in Providence's Head, Perform'd with equal fkill and beauty, Th' avenging angel's tour of duty, Brought all the elements to join, And flars t' affift the great defign, As 140 M ' F I N G A l : [canto As once in league with Kifhon's brook, Famed IfraePs foes they fought and took 78 . Then proud to raife a glorious name, And em'lous of his country's fame, He bade thefe prison-walls arifc, Like temple tow'ring to the fkies, Where Britifh Clemency renown'd, Might fix her feat on facred ground ; (That Virtue, as each herald faith, Of whole blood kin to Punic Faith) 79 Where all her Godlike pow'rs unveiling, She finds a grateful fhrine to dwell in. Then at this altar for her honor, Chofe this Highprieft to wait upon her, Who with juft rites, in antient guifes, Prefents thefe human facrifices ; Great Loring, famed above laymen, A proper Prieft for Lybian Ammon, Who, while Howe's gift his brows adorns, Had match'd that deity in horns 50 . Here ev'ry day her vot'ries tell She more devours than th' idol Bel 81 ; And fourth.] The Vision. 141 And thirfts more rav'noufly for gore, Than any worfhipp'd Pow'r before. That antient Heathen Godhead, Moloch, Oft ftay'd his ftomach with a bullock, Or if his morning rage you'd check firft, One child fufficed him for a breakfaft S2 ; But Britifh Clemency with zeal Devours her hundreds at a meal, Right well by Nat'ralifts defined, A Being of carniv'rous kind. So erft Gargantua pleas'd his palate, And eat his pilgrims up for fallad 83 . Not bleft with maw lefs ceremonious, The wide-mouth'd whale that fwallow'd Jonas 84 ; Like earthquake gapes, to death devote, That open fepulchre, her throat ; The grave, or barren womb you'd flu£F, And fooner bring to cry, enough ; Or fatten up to fair condition, The leanflefh'd kine of Pharaoh's virion 85 . Behold her temple where it (lands Erect by famed Britannic hands ; Tis 1 4 Z M'Fingal: [canto 'Tis the blackhole of Indian ftru&ure, New-built with Englifh architecture, On plan, 'tis faid, contrived and wrote, By Clive, before he cut his throat 86 ; Who ere he took himfelf in hand, Was her Highprieft in Nabob-land &T : And when with conq'ring glory crown'd, He'd well enflav'd the nation round, With pitying heart the gen'rous chief, (Since flav'ry's worfe than lofs of life) Bade defolation circle far, And famine end the work of war ; Thus loofed their chains and for their merits, Difmifs'd them free to worlds of fpirits : Whence they with gratitude and praife, Return'd to attend his latter days, And hov'ring round his reftlefs bed, Spread nightly vifions o'er his head sS . " Now turn, he cried, to nobler fights, And mark the prowefs of our lights : Behold like whelps of Britifh Lyon, The warriors, Clinton, Vaughan and Tryon 89 , March fourth.] The Vision. 143 March forth with patriotic joy, To ravifh, plunder, burn, deftroy. Great Gen'rals foremoft in the nation, The journeymen of Defolation ! Like Samfon's foxes each affails, Let loofe with firebrands in their tails, And fpreads destruction more forlorn, Than they did in Philiftine corn 90 . And fee in flames their triumphs rife, Illuming all the nether fkies, And ftreaming, like a new Aurora, The weilern hemifphere with glory ! What towns in afhes laid confefs Thefe heroes' prowefs and fuccefs ! What blacken'd walls, or burning fane, For trophies fpread the ruin'd plain ! What females caught in evil hour, By force fubmit to Britifh power, Or plunder'd Negroes in difafter Confefs king George their lord and mafter ! What crimfon corfes ftrew their way Till fmoaking carnage dims the day ! Al ong H4 M ' F I N G A l : [canto Along the fhore for fure reduction They wield their befom of deftruttion. Great Homer likens, in his Ilias, To dogftar bright the fierce Achilles ; But ne'er beheld in red proceffion, Three dogftars rife in conftellation ; Or faw in glooms of ev'ning mifty, Such figns of fiery triplicity, Which far beyond the comet's tail, Portend deftruclion where they fail 91 . Oh had Great-Britain's godlike fhore, Produced but ten fuch heroes more, They'd fpared the pains and held the ftation, Of this world's final conflagration, Which when its time comes, at a Hand, Would find its work all done t' its hand ! Yet tho' gay hopes our eyes may blefs ; Indignant fate forbids fuccefs ; Like morning dreams our conqueft flies, Difperf'd before the dawn arife." Here fourth.] The Vision. 145 Here Malcolm paus'd ; when pond'ring long, Grief thus gave utterance to my tongue. " Where fhrink in fear our friends difmay'd, And all the Tories' promis'd aid, Can none amid thefe fierce alarms, Affift the pow'r of royal arms ? " " In vain, he cried, our king depends, On promis'd aid of Tory-friends 92 . When our own efforts want fuccefs, Friends ever fail as fears increafe* As leaves in blooming verdure wove, In warmth of fummer cloath the grove, But when autumnal frofts arife, Leave bare their trunks to wintry fkies ; So while your pow'r can aid their ends, You ne'er can need ten thoufand friends, But once in want by foes difmay'd, May advertife them ftol'n or ftray'd. Thus ere Great-Britain's flrength grew flack, She gain'd that aid, fhe did not lack, But now in dread, imploring pity, All hear unmov'd her dol'rous ditty ; Allegiance 1 46 M'Fingal: [canto Allegiance wand'ring turns aftray, And Faith grows dim for lack of pay In vain me tries by new inventions, Fear, falfhood, flatt'ry, threats and penfions, Or fends Commifs'ners with credentials Of promifes and penitentials 93 . As for his fare o'er Styx of old, The Trojan ftole the bough of gold, And leaft grim Cerberus mould make head, Stuff'd both his fobs with gingerbread 94 ; Behold at Britain's utmoft fhifts, Comes Johnftone loaded with like gifts, To venture thro' the Whiggifh tribe, To cuddle, wheedle, coax and bribe 95 , Enter their lands and on his journey, PoiTeffion take, as King's Attorney, Buy all the vaflals to protect him, And bribe the tenants not t' eject him ; And call to aid his defp'rate mifTion, His petticoated politician, While Venus join'd t' amft the farce, Strolls forth EmbafTadrefs for Mars 96 . In fourth.] The Vision. 147 In vain he ftrives, for while he lingers, Thefe maftiffs bite his ofFring fingers ; Nor buys for George and realms infernal, One fpaniel, but the mongrel Arnold 97 . " 'Twere vain to paint in viiion'd fhow, The mighty nothings done by Howe ; What towns he takes in mortal fray, As flations, whence to run away ; What conquefts gain'd in battles warm, To us no aid, to them no harm ; For flill the event alike is fatal, What'er fuccefs attend the battle, If he gain viclory, or lofe it, Who ne'er had fkill enough to ufe it 98 ; And better 'twere at their expence, T' have drubb'd him into common fenfe, And wak'd by ballings on his rear, Th' activity, tho' but of fear. By flow advance his arms prevail, Like emblematic march of fnail ; That be Millennium nigh or far, 'Twould long before him end the war. From 1 48 M c F i n g a l : [can From York to Philadelphia!! ground, He fweeps the mighty flourifh round, Wheel'd circ'lar by excentric ftars, Like racing boys at prifon-bars, Who take the adverfe crew in whole, By running round the opp'fite goal ; Works wide the traverfe of his courfe, Like fhip in ftorms' oppofing force, Like millhorfe circling in his race, Advances not a fingle pace, And leaves no trophies of reduction, Save that of cankerworms, deftruction. Thus having long both countries curft, He quits them, as he found them firft, Steers home difgraced, of little worth, To join Burgoyne and rail at North ". Now raife thine eyes, and view with pleafure, The triumphs of his famed fucceflbr." 100 [ look'd, and now by magic lore, Faint rofe to view the Jerfey more ; But dimly feen, in glooms array'd, For Night had pour'd her fable made, CTO And fourth.] The Vision. 149 And ev'ry ftar, with glimm'rings pale, Was muffled deep in ev'ning veil : Scarce vifible in dufky night, Advancing redcoats rofe to fight ; The lengthenM train in gleaming rows Stole filent from their flumb'ring foes, Slow moved the baggage and the train, Like fnail crept noifelefs o'er the plain ; No trembling foldier dared to fpeak, And not a wheel prefum'd to creak 10! . My looks my new furprize confefs'd Till by great Malcolm thus addrefs'd : " " Spend not thy wits in vain refearches ; 'Tis one of Clinton's moonlight marches. From Philadelphia now retreating, To fave his anxious troops a beating, With hafty ftride he flies in vain, His rear attack'd on Monmouth plain : With various chance the mortal fray Is lengthen'd to the clofe of day, When his tired bands o'ermatch'd in fight, Are refcued by defcending night 102 ; He 150 M' Fin gal: [canto He forms his camp with vain parade, Till ev'ning fpreads the world with made, Then dill, like fome endanger'd fpark, Steals off on tiptoe in the dark ; Yet writes his king in boafling tone, How grand he march'd by light of moon 103 . I fee him ; but thou canft not ; proud He leads in front the trembling croud, And wifely knows, if danger's near, 'Twill fall the heaviefl on his rear 104 . Go on, great Gen'ral, nor regard The feoffs of ev'ry fcribling Bard, Who ling how Gods that fatal night Aided by miracles your flight, As once they ufed, in Homer's day, To help weak heroes run away ; Tell how the hours at awful trial, Went back, as erfl on Ahaz' dial, While Britifh Jofhua ftay'd the moon, On Monmouth plains for Ajalon : Heed not their fneers and gibes fo arch, Became fhe fet before your march 105 . A fmall fourth.] The Vision. 151 A fmall miftake, your meaning right, You take her influence for her light ; Her influence, which mall be your guide, And o'er your Gen'rallhip prefide. Hence (till fhall teem your empty fkull, With vicYries when the moon's at full, Which by tranfition yet more ftrange, Wane to defeats before the change ; Hence all your movements, all your notions Shall fleer by like excentric motions, Eclips'd in many a fatal crifis, And dimm'd when Wafhington arifes. And fee how Fate, herfelf turn'd traitor, Inverts the antient courfe of nature, And changes manners, tempers, climes, To fuit the genius of the times. See Bourbon forms his gen'rous plan, Firfl: guardian of the rights of man, And prompt in firm alliance joins, To aid the Rebels proud defigns 10fi . Behold from realms of eaftern day, His fails innum'rous fhape their way. In 152 M'Fingal: [canto In warlike line the billows fweep, And roll the thunders of the deep 10T . See low in equinoctial fkies, The Weftern Iflands fall their prize 108 , See Britifh flags o'ermatch'd in might, Put all their faith in inftant flight, Or broken fquadrons from th' affray, Drag flow their wounded hulks away. Behold his chiefs in daring fetts, D'Eftaings 109 , De GrafTes 110 and Fayettes m , Spread thro' our camps their dread alarms, And fwell the fears of rebel-arms. Yet ere our empire fink in night, One gleam of hope fhall ftrike the light ; As lamps that fail of oil and fire, Collect one glimmering to expire. And lo where fouthern fhores extend, Behold our union'd holts defcend, Where Charleftown views with varying beams, Her turrets gild th' encircling ftreams. There by fuperior might compell'd, Behold their gallant Lincoln yield, Nor fourth. 1 The Vision. 153 Nor aught the wreaths avail him now, Pluck'd from Burgoyne's imperious brow 112 . See furious from the vanquifh'd ftrand, Cornwallis leads his mighty band I The fouthern realms and Georgian more Submit and own the vi&or's pow'r, Lo, funk before his wafting way, The Carolinas fall his prey 113 ! In vain embattled hofts of foes Eflay in warring ftrife t' oppofe. See fhrinking from his conq'ring eye, The rebel legions fall or fly m ; And with'ring in thefe torrid fkies, The northern laurel fades and dies 11S . With rapid force he leads his band To fair Virginia's fated ftrand, Triumphant eyes the travell'd zone, And boafts the fouthern realms his own m , Nor yet this hero's glories bright Blaze only in the fields of fight ; Not Howe's humanity more deferving, In gifts of hanging and of ftarving ; Not 154 M 'Fin gal : [canto Not Arnold plunders more tobacco, Or fleals more Negroes for Jamaica m ; Scarce Rodney's felf among th' Euftatians, Infults fo well the laws of nations lls ; Ev'n Tryon's fame grows dim, and mourning, He yields the laurel crown of burning 119 . I fee with rapture and furprize, New triumphs fparkling in thine eyes. But view where now renew'd in might, Again the rebels dare the fight." I look'd and far in fouthern fkies, Saw Greene, their fecond hope, arife, And with his fmall but gallant band, Invade the Carolinian land m . As winds in ftormy circles whirl'd Rufh billowing o'er the darken'd world, And where their wafting fury roves, SuccefTive fvveep th' aftonifh'd groves ; Thus where he pours the rapid fight, Our boafted conquefts link in night, And wide o'er all th' extended field, Our forts refign, our armies yield, Till fourth.] The Vision. 155 Till now regain'd the vanquifh'd land, He lifts his ftandard on the flrand m . Again to fair Virginia's coaft, I turn'd and view'd the Britifh hoft. Where Chefapeak's wide waters lave Her fhores and join th' Atlantic wave, There fam'd Cornwallis tow'ring rofe, And fcorn'd fecure his diftant foes ; His bands the haughty rampart raife, And bid th' imperial ftandard blaze m . When lo, where ocean's bounds extend, I faw the Gallic fails afcend, With fav'ring breezes ftem their way, And croud with mips the fpacious bay 123 . Lo Wafhington from northern fhores, O'er many a region, wheels his force, And Rochambeau with legions bright, Defcends in terrors* to the fight m . Not fwifter cleaves his rapid way, The eagle cow'ring o'er his prey, Or knights in fam'd romance that fly On fairy pinions thro' the fky. Amaz'd 156 M'Fingal: [canto Amaz'd the Briton's ftartled pride, Sees ruin wake on ev'ry fide ; And all his troops to fate confign'd, By inftantaneous ftroke Burgoyn'd 12B . Not Cadmus view'd with more furprize, From earth embattled armies rife, When by fuperior pow'r impell'd, He fow'd with dragon's teeth the field m . Here Gallic troops in terror ftand, There rum in arms the Rebel band ; Nor hope remains from mortal fight, Or that laft Britifh refuge, flight m . I faw with looks downcaft and grave, The Chief emerging from his cave m , (Where chaced like hare in mighty round, His hunters earth'd him firft in ground) And doom'd by fate to rebel fway, Yield all his captur'd hofts a prey 129 . There while I view'd the vanquifh'd town, Thus with a figh my friend went on : " Beholdft thou not that band forlorn, Like flaves in Roman triumphs borne 130 ; Their fourth.] The Vision. 157 Their faces length'ning with their fears, And cheeks diftain'd with ftreams of tears, Like dramatis perforin fage, Equipt to acl on Tyburn's flage. Lo thefe are they, who lur'd by follies, Left all and folio w'd great Cornwallis ; True to their King, with firm devotion, For confcience fake and hop'd promotion, Expe£tant of the promis'd glories, And new Millennial Hate of Tories. Alas, in vain, all doubts forgetting, They tried th' omnipotence of Britain ; But found her arm, once ftrong and brave, So fhorten'd now fhe cannot fave. Not more agnail departed fouls, Who rifk'd their fate on Popiih bulls 131 , And find St. Peter at the wicket Refufe to counteriign their ticket, When driv'n to purgatory back, With all their pardons in their pack : Than Tories muft'ring at their flations On faith of royal proclamations 132 . As 158 M ' F I N G A l : [canto As Pagan Chiefs at ev'ry crilis, Confirm'd their leagues by facrifices, And herds of beafts to all their deities, Oblations fell at clofe of treaties : Cornwallis thus in antient fafhion, Concludes his league of cap'tulation, And victims due to Rebel-glories, Gives this an ofF'ring up of Tories. See where reliev'd from fad embargo, Steer off confign'd a recreant cargo, Like old fcapegoats to roam in pain, Mark'd like their great forerunner, Cain 133 . The reft, now doom'd by Britifh leagues, To juftice of refentful Whigs, Hold worthlefs lives on tenure ill, Of tenancy at Rebel-will, While hov'ring o'er their forfeit perfons, The gallows waits his fure reverfions. Thou too, M'Fingal, ere that day, Shalt tafte the terrors of th' affray. See o'er thee hangs in angry Ikies, Where Whiggifh conftellations rife, And fourth.] The Vision. 159 And while plebeian figns afcend, Their mob-infpiring afpects bend ; That baleful Star, whofe horrid hair 1:il Shakes forth the plagues of down and tar ! I fee the pole, that rears on high Its flag terrific thro' the fky ; The Mob beneath prepar'd t' attack, And tar predeftin'd for thy back ! Ah quit, my friend, this dang'rous home, Nor wait the darker fcenes to come ; For know that Fate's aufpicious door, Once fhut to flight is oped no more, Nor wears its hinge by various ftations, Like Mercy's door in proclamations 135 . But left thou paufe, or doubt to fly, To ftranger vifions turn thine eye : Each cloud that dimm'd thy mental ray, And all the mortal mills decay ; See more than human Pow'rs befriend, And lo their hoftile forms afcend ! See tow'ring o'er th' extended ftrand, The Genius of the weftern land, In 1 60 M'Fingal : [canto In vengeance arm'd, his fword affumes, And Hands, like Tories, dreft in plumes 136 . See o'er yon Council feat with pride, How Freedom fpreads her banners wide 137 ! There Patriotifm with torch addrefs'd, To fire with zeal each daring breaft ! While all the Virtues in their band, Efcape from yon unfriendly land, Defert their antient Britifh flation, PofTeft. with rage of emigration. Honor, his bufinefs at a Hand, For fear of ftarving quits their land ; And Juftice, long difgraced at Court, had By Mansfield's fentence been tranfported 138 . VicVry and Fame attend their way, Tho' Britain wifh their longer flay, Care not what George or North 139 would be at, Nor heed their writs of ne exeat 140 ; But fired with love of colonizing, Quit the fall'n empire for the rifing." I look'd and faw with horror fmitten, Thefe hoftile pow'rs averfe to Britain. When fourth.] The Vision. 161 When lo, an awful fpectre rofe 141 , With languid palenefs on his brows ; Wan dropfies fwcll'd his form beneath, And iced his bloated cheeks with death ; His tatter'd robes expofed him bare, To ev'ry blafl of ruder air ; On two weak crutches propt he Hood, That bent at ev'ry Hep he trod, Gilt titles graced their fides fo flender, One, "Regulation," t'other, "Tender 142 ;" His breaftplate grav'd with various dates, " The faith of all th' United States 143 : " Before him went his fun'ral pall, His grave flood dug to wait his fall. I ftarted, and aghafl I cried, " What means this fpettre at their fide ? What danger from a Pow'r fo vain, And why he joins that fplendid train ? " " Alas, great Malcolm cried, experience Might teach you not to truft appearance. Here (lands, as drefl by fierce Bellona 144 , The ghoft of Continental Money 145 , Of i6z M'FlNGAL [canto Of dame NeceiTity defcended, With whom Credulity engendered. Tho' born with conftitution frail, And feeble ftrength that foon muft fail ; Yet ftrangely vers'd in magic lore, And gifted with transforming pow'r. His fkill the wealth Peruvian joins With diamonds of Brazilian mines 146 . As erft Jove fell by fubtle wiles On Danae's apron thro' the tiles, In fhow'rs of gold ; 14T his potent hand Shall flied like fhow'rs thro' all the land. Lefs great the magic art was reckon'd, Of tallies caft by Charles the fecond, Or Law's famed MiiTiffipi fchemes 148 , Or all the wealth of Southfea dreams 149 . For he of all the world alone Owns the longfought Philof'pher's ftone l5 \ Reftores the fab'lous times to view, And proves the tale of Midas true m . O'er heaps of rags, he waves his wand, All turn to gold at his command, Provide fourth.] The Vision. 163 Provide for prefent wants and future, Raife armies, victual, clothe, accoutre, Adjourn our conquefb by eflbign, Check Howe's advance and take Burgoyne, Then makes all days of payment vain, And turns all back to rags again 15i . In vain great Howe mall play his part, To ape and counterfeit his art : In vain fhall Clinton, more belated, A conj'rer turn to imitate it lo3 ; With like ill luck and pow'r as narrow, They'll fare, like for'cers of old Pharaoh, Who tho' the art they underftood Of turning rivers into blood, And caus'd their frogs and fnakes t' exift, That with fome merit croak'd and hifs'd, Yet ne'er by ev'ry quaint device, Could frame the true Mofaic lice 15 \ He for the Whigs his arts fhall try, Their firft, and long their fole ally ; A patriot firm, while breath he draws, He'll perifh in his country's caufe ; And 1 64 M 'Fikgal : [canto And when his magic labours ccafe, Lie buried in eternal peace. Now view the fcenes in future hours, That wait the famed European Pow'rs. See where yon chalky cliffs arife, The hills of Britain ftrike your eyes loj : Its fmall extenfion long fupplied, By vaft immenfity of pride ; So small that had it found a ftation In this new world at firft creation, Or were by Juilice doom'd to fufFer, And for its crimes tranfported over 106 We'd find fall room for't in lake Eri, or That larger waterpond, Superior, Where North on margin taking {land, Would not be able to fpy land !5T . No more, elate with pow'r, at eafe She deals her infill ts round the leas ; See dwindling from her height amain, What piles of ruin fpread the plain ; With mould'ring hulks her ports are fill'd, And brambles clothe the cultur'd field ! See fourth.] The Vision. 165 See on her cliffs her Genius lies, His handkerchief at both his eyes, With many a deepdrawn figh and groan, To mourn her ruin and his own ! While joyous Holland, France and Spain, With conq'ring navies rule the main, And Ruffian banners wide unfurl'd, Spread commerce round the eaftern world 158 . And fee (light hateful and tormenting) Th' Amer'can empire proud and vaunting, From anarchy fhall change her craiis, And fix her pow'r on firmer balls ; To glory, wealth and fame afcend, Her commerce rife, her realms extend ; Where now the panther guards his den, Her defart forefts fwarm with men, Her cities, tow'rs and columns rife, And dazzling temples meet the fkies ; Her pines defcending to the main, In triumph fpread the watry plain, Ride inland lakes with fav'ring gales, And croud her ports with whit'ning fails ; Till 1 66 M'Fingal: [canto Till to the fkirts of weftern day, The peopled regions own her fway lo9 ." Thus far M'Fingal told his tale, When thundring ftiouts his ears affail, And ftrait a Tory that flood centry, Aghaft rufh'd headlong down the entry, And with wild outcry, like magician, Difpers'd the refidue of vifion 1G0 : For now the Whigs intell'gence found Of Tories muftring under ground, And with rude bangs and loud uproar, 'Gan thunder furious at the door 161 . The lights put out, each Tory calls To cover him, on cellar walls, Creeps in each box, or bin, or tub, To hide his head from wrath of mobj Or lurks, where cabbages in row Adorn'd the fide with verdant mow. M'Fingal deem'd it vain to ftay, And rifk his bones in fecond fray ; But chofe a grand retreat from foes, In lit'ral fenfe, beneath their nofe 16 ' 2 . The fourth.] The Vision'. 167 The window then, which none elfe knew, He foftly open'd and crept thro' And crawling flow in deadly fear, By movements wife made good his rear. Then fcorning all the fame of martyr, For Bofton took his fwift departure m ; Nor dar'd look back on fatal fpot, More than the family of Lot 164 . Not North in more diftrefs'd condition, Outvoted firft by oppofition : Nor good king George when that dire phantom Of Independence comes to haunt him, Which hov'ring round by night and day, Not all his conj'rers yet can lay ,6 \ His friends, aflembled for his fake, He wifely left in pawn at Hake, To tarring, feath'ring, kicks and drubs Of furious, difappointed mobs, And with their forfeit hides to pay For him, their leader, crept away 166 . So when wife Noah fummon'd greeting All animals to gen'ral meeting ; From 168 M'Fingal: [canto From ev'ry fide the members Tent All kinds of beafls to reprefent ; Each from the flood took care t' embark, And fave his carcafe in the ark ; But as it fares in Mate and church, Left his conltituents in the lurch. FINIS. NOTES. CANTO I. 1 The origin of the word Yankey (now spelled Yankee) is involved in obscurity. Some suppose it to be derived from an appellation in use in Eu- rope, long before the settlement of the English colonies in America. Others, with more plausi- bility, say that it was coined from the guttural sound of the New England Indians in their at- tempt to pronounce the word English. The sound would be nearly represented thus — Yaunghees, the g being pronounced hard, and approaching to the sound of Jc, joined with a strong aspirate. The Dutch settlers on the Hudson adopted it as an epithet of derision, and applied it to all the in- habitants of New England. Dr. Thacher says that a farmer of Cambridge, Massachusetts, named Jonathan Hastings, who lived at about the year 1713, used it as a favorite cant word to express excellence, as a yankee good house, or yanlcee good cider. The students of Harvard on that account 170 Notes. called him Yankee Jonathan. As he was a weak man, when the students wished to denote a person of that character, they would call him Yankee Jonathan. It is now often used in England as a general name for the people of the United States. Layard, in his narrative of his discoveries at Nin- eveh, says that some of the natives there uttered a sound very similar to that of Yankee, in giving a general name to the Americans. 2 This is in allusion to the tumultuous flight of the British toward Boston, after the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord on the 19th of April, 1775. It might also apply to many similar flights of the enemy during the war. This canto was published in the autumn of 1775, and the allusion was only to the events in the vicinity of Boston. 3 When General Gage heard of the affair at Lexington, he sent out Lord Percy, a son of the Duke of Northumberland, with a reinforcement. Percy was a lineal descendant of the noted Earl Percy, who was slain in the battle of Chevy Chase, so celebrated in English song and stoiy. As he marched out through Roxbury, his band playing Yankee Doodle, in derision, (it being then used in the British army as a sort of Rogue's March, when drumming delinquents out of the camp.) he observed a boy performing many antics. Percy asked him why he was so merry. " To think," said the shrewd lad, " how you will dance by-and- by, to Chevy Chase." Percy was often influenced Notes. 171 by presentiments, and the remark of the boy pressed heavily upon his spirits all the day. 4 M 'Fingal is a representative of numerous magistrates at the commencement of the Revolu- tion, who, desirous of retaining their offices, were over-zealous for the Crown, and became ex- ceedingly obnoxious to the Whigs, as the Friends of Liberty were called. 5 Fingal was the Warrior King of ancient Scot- land, celebrated for his martial deeds in the Poems of Ossian, a reputed Celtic Homer, who lived in the second or third century of the Christian Era These poems, professedly translated from the Gaelic, or Erse language, by James McPherson, a native of Inverness-shire, Scotland, were first pub- lished in 1762, under the title of Fingal ; An Ancient Epic Poem, in Six Books. Many believe this epic to have been the offspring of the brain of McPherson alone. The question of its antiquity is yet open. McPherson was in America in 1770, as Surveyor General, under Governor Johnstone, of Florida ; and it is asserted by McGregor, that he took his Gaelic manuscripts with him, and lost many of them there. 6 The Gaelic Taischitaraugh, a well-known Highland superstition. The belief was prevalent that certain persons were endowed with powers of divination, and that they would sometimes not only foretell events, but by some mysterious method, unknown to themselves had actual 172 Notes. visions of things distant, or in future. The belief was, according to Martin, universal in the Western Islands; and Dr. Johnson, in his narrative of his visit there, gives a graphic account of the su- perstition, and even defends it. Sir Walter Scott often used it with effect, in prose and verse. The character of M'Allister, in the Legend of Mon- trose, exhibits it ; and in his fioe ballad of Lord Roland, and in the Lady of the Lake, he has given glimpses of it. So has Campbell, in LochieVs Warning ; and Collins, in his ode on the Superstitions of the Highlands finely describes it. The belief has almost passed away, and now has existence only in tradition and poetry. 7 The English people had a traditional hatred of the Stuarts, which, after the rebellion in favor of the young Pretender, Charles Edward, in 1745, was extended, in a great degree, to the whole Scotch people. On the accession of George the Third, the minds of the English people, and espe- cially of the ultra Protestants, were excited by unpleasant forebodings, because John, Earl of Bute, a needy Scotch adventurer, who had been the young King's tutor, was admitted to his counsels as Chief Minister, to the exclusion of the eminent William Pitt. He was a great favorite of the queen-dowager, and rumor spoke disparag- ingly of her virtue. These facts made the people fear the influence of the Jacobites, as the adhe- rents of the Stuarts were called, in the affairs of Notes. 173 government ; and somebody bad tbe boldness, at the beginning of George's reign, to place a large placard on tbe Royal Exchange, with the words. " No Petticoat Government — No Scotch Minis- ter." The Scotch were noted for their loyalty, in this country, and were generally found among the Tories, especially in the Carolinas. This fact, and the odium that rested upon the Jacobites in the mother country, made the Americans, during the Revolution, look with suspicion upon all Scotch- men. Jefferson manifested this feeling, when he drew up the Declaration of Independence. In the original draft, he alluded to "Scotch and foreign mercenaries." This was omitted, on mo- tion of Dr. Witherspoon, who was a Scotchman by birth. In most minds, the word Jacobite was synonymous with Popery. Trumbull showed his dislike of the Scotch by his choice of a hero in this poem. Frenau, another eminent poet of the Revolution, also evinced the same hatred. In one of his poems, in which he gives Burgoyne many hard rubs, he consigns the Tories, with Burgoyne at their head, to an ice-bound, fog-cov- ered island, off the northern coast of Scotland, thus : " There, Loyals, there, with loyal hearts, retire, There pitch your tents, and kindle there your fire ; There desert Nature will her stings display, And fiercest hunger on your vitals prey ; And with yourselves, let John Burgoyne retire, To reign vour monarch, whom your hearts desire." 1 74 Notes. * When bees are swarming, loud beating npon sonorous metal, such as tin pans, kettles, et cetera, causes them to alight, or "settle," when they are placed in a newly-prepared hive. 9 Alluding to the influences of the established churches of England and Scotland, in favor of the crown. 10 Bute is mentioned in a preceding note. Lord Mansfield, here alluded to, was a powerful sup- porter of the Ministry, and was employed to draw up many of the bills introduced after the passage of the famous stamp act, in 1765, for enslaving the colonies. On that account, and because of his Popish tendencies, he was hated by the Americans. He was one of the most able of the Chief Justices of England, and was raised to the peerage in 1776. Because he seemed to favor the Boman Catho- lics, his mansion was burned during the anti-Cath- olic riots in London in 1780, and with it his valuable collection of books and rare manuscripts. 11 Soon after the accession of George the Third, Bute sent secret agents to America, to spy out the condition of the colonists. The Grermans, who were then rapidly settling large districts in Pennsyl- vania, as well as in the Carolinas, were found to be a liberty-loving people, and generally inimical to royal prerogatives. The French lloman Catho- lics, then quite rapidly increasing in Maryland, and the French Protestants in South Carolina, were obnoxious to the same objections, and the Notes. 175 King was advised to cast obstacles in the way of emigration to the English colonies in America. Restrictive measures were soon employed, and a scheme was proposed to " reform the American Charters." In this lay the egg of active tyranny. This measure is alluded to in one of the charges made against the King in the Declaration of Inde- pendence. 12 Sybillae were prophetic women, ten in number, said to have lived in the early ages of Greece and Rome. The most noted of these was the Sybil of Cumse, celebrated by Virgil in the sixth book of his JEneid. She is said to have written her pro- phecies in books, in which she foretold the fate of the Roman Empire. This Sybil was consulted by iEneas, and, according to the poets, she accom- panied him to the lower world. She is probably the one who offered her books to Tarquin in his palace. She had nine volumes, which she offered to sell to Tarquin at a very high price. He refused. She disappeared, burned three of them, and then offered him the remaining six at the same price. He again refused, when she burned three more, and came on the same errand. The astonished Emperor bought the remaining three, and they were long preserved with the greatest care. The whole story is probably a poetic fable, covering some important fact in Roman history. 13 Dodona was the most ancient oracle in Greece and is said to have been consulted by the Pelasgi. 176 Notes. The responses of the oracle were delivered by a priestess, from the sacred oak or beach. There were two oracles of the same name, one at Epirus, and one in Thessaly. 14 The tripod was an ancient three-legged stool, on which priests and priestesses sat when they uttered their oracles. 15 In the autumn of 1775, the British govern- ment bargained with some of the petty German princes for about seventeen thousand troops, to assist in crushing the rebellion in America. As the larger portion of these troops were hired from the Prince of Hesse Cassel, they bore the general name of Hessians, and as such are known in the history of our War for Independence. They came in the summer and autumn of 1776. and were first let loose upon the patriots on Long- Island, and in lower Westchester County, New- York. They were generally ignorant, blood- thirsty and cruel, and were despised by the English soldiers. They were employed in the least hon- orable enterprises during the war, especially in forays upon hamlets, and the burning of towns. They cost the British government a million of dollars, and a vast amount of reputation among the nations. The scheme for their employment was distasteful even to the King, and it was de- nounced in Parliament, as " disgraceful to the British name." 16 This prophecy was but half accomplished. Notes. 177 The mercenaries did come over, but the hanging, and division of estates never occurred. 17 A Grecian warrior and herald, in the army that besieged Troy. His voice, according to Homer, was louder than the combined voices of fifty men. 18 In the wars between the ancient Greeks and Persians, and other eastern nations, elephants were employed. Sometimes they became fright- ened, turned and fled. In their flight they would trample upon those " they came to aid." 19 Penelope, wife of Ulysses, monarch of Ithaca, who was remarkable for her fidelity to her hus- band. Ulysses was absent twenty years, after his departure for the siege of Troy. Many lovers sought the hand of Penelope, and her relatives urged her to abandon all thoughts of her husband's return. She finally agreed to make choice of one of the suitors as soon as she should complete a web she was then weaving, as a funeral ornament for the aged Laertes. Every night she would undo all that she had wrought in the day time, and thus she protracted her promise until the final return of her husband. 20 The British Parliament, in its assertion of its power c< to bind the colonies in all cases whatso- ever," levied a small duty upon all tea imported into the colonies. The sum was small, but the principles involved were of vast importance. The colonists had already stoutly opposed govern- 178 Notes. raent measures having a like tendency to tax the people without their, consent, and had boldly enunciated the grand postulate, that taxation WITHOUT REPRESENTATION, IS OPPRESSION. The even nominal duty on tea, levied without the con- sent of the colonists, was in violation of the free- dom negatively asserted in that postulate, and the people resolved not to submit to the tax. They held meetings, declared that tea should not be landed for sale on our shores, while the duty re- mained, warned consignees not to offend the popu- lar will, and appointed committees of vigilance and correspondence to see that that will had free exercise. Commotions ensued, cargoes of tea were destroyed, and the Revolutionary crisis was thus hastened. For ten long years, the people had remonstrated, petitioned, addressed the King, Parliament and people of Great Britain, but to no purpose, and so, despairing of redress, and deter- mined to be free, they raised the arm of resistance, and the war began. 21 The terms Whig and Tory were adopted at an early period of the struggle. The appellation of Tory was first given to the wild Irish, outside of the English real jurisdiction in Ireland, who made predatory war against the British settle- ments in Dublin and vicinity. In the civil wars in the reign of Charles the First, these clans adhered to the royal party. The name was also applied to a volunteer troop of cavalry in Charles's Notes. 179 army, composed of young noblemen, and the sons of gentlemen, who were famous for revelry, and the singing of songs, the chorus of which con- sisted in a roll of unmeaning words. They had a favorite ballad, suited to the times, the chorus of which was, " Sing tory, rory, rantum, sanctum, tory rory row.'* The origin of the word Whig is not so clear. Some say that it originally meant a sour kind of crab-apple, and that it was applied to the Puri- tans in the army of Cromwell, who clipped their hair short, scowled upon all pleasantries, &c. They were called "Whigs, prick-ears, and round- heads. Bishop Burnet gives a different account of its origin. The waggoners in the West of Scotland, when driving their horses, used the word ivhiggam, and the drivers were called ivhigga- mores, abbreviated to whiggs. On one occasion, about six thousand of these people marched to Edinburgh, headed by the Marquis of Argyle, to oppose the ministerial troops, and, after that, all who opposed the court, were called Whigs, in contempt. Ever since then, the court party in England have been called Tories, and their oppo- nents Whigs. These were significant terms for the Americans at the commencement of the revo- lutionary contest, and became common in 1774. 22 Allusion is here probably made to a King of the Averni district, whom Caesar made a prisoner after his last battle with and final conquest of the 1 8c Notes. Gauls, and carried in triumph to Rome. When he laid the royal ensigns and arms at the foot of Caesar, he exclaimed, " Receive them ; thou, 0, bravest of men, hast conquered a brave man." The Senate de- creed a triumph to Caesar, and the Gallic King and other notable prisoners were astonished and awed by the great display of wealth, and power, and pageantry, in the imperial city. 23 Formerly town meetings were usually held in the churches or meeting-houses in the country towns of New England. 24 Mercury was the messenger of the gods, and is represented with wings upon his cap and feet, and bearing a staff (caduceus) in his hand, about which serpents are entwined. Mercury was also considered the patron of eloquence, and of thieves, and other dishonest persons. 25 In many parts of New England, the term Moderator is yet given to the chairman of the meeting, whether political or religious. In the present case, he is seated in one of those high, old-fashioned pulpits, which seemed to have been constructed chiefly for the purpose of concealing the person of the speaker. 26 During the summer and autumn of 1774, the people of the colonies, especially those of New England, commenced arming themselves. They practised daily in military exercises ; the manufac- ture of gunpowder was encouraged ; and throughout Massachusetts in particular, the people were en- Notes. 181 rolled as a militia force, in companies, prepared to take up arms, and rush to the field at a minute's warning. From this circumstance, they were called minute-men. Such were the men who opposed the British at Lexington and Concord, and annoyed them by a galling fire from behind hedges and stone walls, all the way of their re- treat to Boston. 27 iEolus was the god or ruler of the winds ; and was represented as holding them in restraint, in a great cave, from which they issued at his bidding. 2S Numbers, chapter xii. 29 Honorius, as opposed to M'Fingal, is a repre- sentative of a stanch Whig patriot, and a bold leader of his class. 30 British statesmen, opposed to the colonists, in their struggle for freedom, were fond of boasting of the liberality of Great Britain, toward her children in the New World. They were either ignorant of, or artfully concealed the fact, that England had been fully repaid for all her boasted aids, by services, the most arduous and important. All of the settlements, except Georgia, had been made on private account ; and all through the colonial period, the connection with Great Britain was a detriment to the colonies, rather than a benefit. For long and gloomy years, they had struggled up, from feebleness to strength, unaided and alone. They had built fortifications, raised armies, and fought battles, for England's glory 182 Notes. and their own preservation, without England's aid, and often without her sympathy. In 1758, when the French and Indian War was progressing, public and private advances to carry on the war, made in Massachusetts alone, amounted to more than a million of dollars. The taxes on real estate, in order to raise money, were enormous ; in many instances, equal to two-thirds of the in- come of the tax-payers. Yet it was levied by their own representatives, and they did not com- plain. Lord Baltimore spent £200,000 sterling, in colonizing Maryland ; and William Penn became deeply involved in debt, in his efforts to settle and improve Pennsylvania. On one occasion, in 1765, Charles Townshend, in the House of Commons, spoke of the Americans as children planted by the care of Great Britain, nourished up by its indul- gence, and protected by its arms. Colonel Barre replied, " They planted by your care ! No, your oppressions planted them in America." * * * " They nourished up by your indulgence/ They grew by your neglect of them." ***** " They protected by your arms ! They have nobly taken up arms in your defence." And then he recounted the valorous deeds of the Americans, and warned the English legislature that " that same spirit of freedom which actuated the people at first," in fleeing from persecution, would " ac- company them still," and predicted that they would take up arms in defence of their liberties. Notes. 183 31 Growth and decay seem to be the law of pro- gress in nations as well as individuals. This truth, all past history teaches us. States have their youth, maturity, and season of decrepitude before decay. 3! This is to become a public charge. The national debt of England, at that time, was more than seven hundred and fifty millions of dollars. The debt was commenced by William the Third, and the English people were alarmed at its amount, in 1697, then only twenty-five millions of dollars. At the close of the war of the Revolution, in 1783, it had swelled to about thirteen hundred millions. Now (1857) it is more than four thou- sand millions of dollars ! 33 This alludes to the time of the elder Pitt's administration, when Canada was wrested from the French, and a vast empire in India lay pros- trate at the feet of Great Britain. Fifteen years had now elapsed, and the Gallic or French power had loomed up amazingly, and the traditionary feud between the two people, though quieted by treaties, was as fierce as ever. When our Revolu* tion broke out, the French perceived an opportu- nity to damage England, by helping her rebellious colonies. Early in the struggle, the Americans received material aid from France, and finally, in 1778, formed a treaty of alliance with that nation. For three years, Gallic crows had been whetting " their beaks to pick her." 184 Notes. 34 An ancient " Hospital of St. Mary of Bethle hem," situated in London, and incorporated by Henry the Eighth, in 1546. The hospital build- ing in Moorfields, which was erected in 1675, was pulled down in 1814. The present buildings of the institution are in St. George's Fields. It has long been used as a hospital for lunatics, which explains the allusion in the poem. In later edi- tions of this poem, the word Bethlehem is changed to Bedlam. The latter is a corruption of the former. 35 « "Who sees thee ? (and what is one ?) who shouldst be seen, A goddess among gods, adored and served, By angels numberless thy daily train." Satan to Eve. ******* — "but henceforth my early care, Not without song, each morning and due praise, Shall tend thee, and the fertile burden ease Of thy full branches, offered free to all ; Till, dieted by thee, I grow mature In knowledge as the gods, who all things know." Eve to the Tree of L'fe, Milton 's Paradise Lost, Book IX. 36 Special reference is here made to an act, passed by the British Parliament in 1766, known as the Declaratory Act, in which the omnipotence of the British Parliament was affirmed, and its " right " declared to bind the colonies in all cases whatsoever." This measure, strange as it may appear, was proposed by Pitt, who had Notes. 185 labored zealously for the repeal of the odious stamp act. It was a necessary expedient, he thought, in order to insure that repeal, but it un- fortunately became the egg from which issued the most obnoxious measures. 27 When, in 1534, Henry the Eighth of England quarrelled with the Pope, he cast off his allegiance to the Pontiff, and settled the supremacy over the Church and State, in his dominions, in the person of the Sovereign. The monarchs of England have ever since asserted and maintained that supremacy. 33 It is asserted (and positively denied) that, in the ninth century, a female named Joan conceived a violent passion for a young monk named Felda, and in order to be admitted into his monastery, assumed the garb of a man. On the death of her lover, she entered upon the duties of Professor, and, being very learned, was elected Pope on the death of Adrian, in 872. This story has occa- sioned violent disputes among ecclesiastical his- torians. We have no record of any trial to prove her sex, as in the case of the Chevalier D'Eon, before Lord Mansfield. 39 The English Parliament House is called St. Stephen's Chapel. A chapel so called in honor of Stephen, the proto -martyr, was erected by King Stephen, at about the year 1135. It was rebuilt in 1347 ; and about the year 1550, it was applied to the use of Parliament. 1 86 Notes. 40 Lord North, Earl of Guilford, became First Lord of the Treasury, or Prime Minister of England, in 1770, and continued in that important office until 1782. He was a well-meaning man, but lacked the better qualities of a great states- man ; and by his official blunders, obstinacy, and unwise measures, he was chiefly instrumental in alienating the loj'alty of the American people, and in causing and protracting their armed strug- gle for independence. He was blind for some years before his death, which occurred in July, 1792, when he was sixty years of age. See note 157, Canto IV. 41 This is in allusion to the measure known as the Quebec Act, in the spring of 1774, which established the Roman Catholic religion in Canada. When the British ministry perceived the general disaffection in the American colonies, and the probability that the important province of Canada would join in the revolt, this conciliatory measure toward the Roman Catholic population there, was intended to prevent such a result. The cry of " No Popery " was then very popular in England, and the Quebec Act deeply offended public senti- ment there, and in America. The title here given to the central Papal authority is derived from the 17th chapter of Bevelations. 42 At the commencement of hostilities, British ships and armies were employed in plundering our seas, ravaging our coast, burning our towns, and Notes. 187 destroying the lives of our people, and when, in the summer of 1779, the royal Governor of New York, William Tryon, had burned East Haven, Fairfield, and Norwalk, in Connecticut, on Long Island Sound, and openly insulted the defenceless inhabitants, he boasted of his extreme leniency in leaving a single house standing on the New England coast. And British ministers often disgusted their own people by repeating that boast. 43 One of the great foundations of the British Constitution was obtained from Charles the First by Parliament, in 1628, by his signature to a bill which recognized all the legal privileges of the subject. On the accession of William and Mary, in 1689, a Bill of JRigJits, declaratory of the franchises of British subjects, was passed, and received the royal signature. It is the only written laiv respecting the liberties of the British people, exeept Magna Charta — the Great Charter. 44 For ten long years, the colonists petitioned the King and Parliament for justice, and a redress of grievances. Instead of listening and com- plying, the government denied their prayer, some- times with indifference, at others with insults, and again by an accumulation of oppressive measures, which restricted personal liberty and commercial operations. 45 First Kings, chapter xviii. Baal, or Belus, was the chief idol among the idolatrous nations of Canaan and vicinity. 1 88 Notes. 46 The crocodile was worshipped in only some portions of Ancient Egypt; in others it was warred upon ; and the ichneumon, which destroyed its eggs, was regarded with great favor. Many mummied crocodiles have been found at Thebes, and at the modern Maahdah, where extensive grottos contain them. Persons were sometimes eaten by the beast, after having adored it. 47 In almost every speech from the throne, con- cerning the American people, the King used honeyed words, and the colonists were often deceived by false hopes, springing from the prom- ises of " His Most Gracious Majesty," which ministers compelled him to break. The hopes which budded in the warmth of these promises, were uniformly blasted by the frosts of Parlia- mentary action. 48 In consequence of the destruction of tea in Boston Harbor, [see note 31, p. 257,] and other overt acts of rebellion, so called, Parliament, by enactment in the spring of 1774, ordered the port of Boston to be closed against all shipping, and suspended all commercial operations there. This is known as the Boston Port Bill, which was pro- ductive of more real misery, and greater irrita- tion, than any other of the obnoxious measures of the ministry. Soon after the passage of that bill, others, equally tyrannical, were adopted. Among them was one, whose operations were equivalent to a total subversion of the Charter of Massa- Notes. 189 chusetts. Other colonies were threatened with a similar lash, if they dared to raise voice or hand against the omnipotence of Parliament. By that enactment, every thing pertaining to courts of law and equity was placed in the hands of the creatures of the government ; and the officers in the province were made independent of the people by receiving their salaries from the crown. 4? Thomas Gage was a native of England, and was an active officer during the French and Indian War. He was appointed Military Governor of Montreal in 1760, and on the departure of Amherst from America in 1763, he succeeded that officer as Commander-in-chief of the British forces in America. He was appointed Governor of Massachusetts, in the place of Hutchinson, in 1774, and went to Boston on the first of June, fully authorized and prepared to enforce the pro- visions of the Port Bill, by arms if necessary. He was naturally amiable in disposition, but in executing the will of his royal master, he became, necessarily, a tyrant. Gage was the last royal Governor of Massachusetts. Howe succeeded him as military commander in the summer of 1775, and he went to England in the autumn of the same year, where he died in April, 1787. 50 This is a law term, signifying " the power of the country," or the citizens who are summoned to assist an officer in suppressing a riot, or in execu- ting any legal precept which is forcibly opposed. 190 Notes. 51 Genesis, chapter iii. — "In at his mouth The devil entered, and his brutal sense In heart or head, possessing, soon inspired With act intelligential." Paradise Lost, Book IX. 52 A writ of ejectment. 53 At the commencement of the contest, loyalists and timid republicans, desirous of conciliating government officers, formally addressed them, and assured them of friendship and support. In Boston, in 1774, when General Gage was enforcing the Port Bill with rigor, one hundred and twenty merchants and others, signed an address to Gage, expressive of their gratitude and loyalty, and even went so far as to offer to pay the East India Company for the tea destroyed in December pre- vious. There were some others who protested against the course of the Committee of Corre- spondence, and the action of a large portion of the ministers of the Gospel in New England, who, they averred, were unduly exciting the people, and urging them to ruin. These " Addressors and Protestors " were summarily dealt with by the Whigs, and many of them were compelled to sign a recantation which the General Committee of Correspondence for Massachusetts declared satisfactory. Those who would not sign it left the province, and became the first Refugee Royal- Notes. 191 ists. See Lossing's Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution, i., 512. 54 At the commencement of the war, great prejudice prevailed throughout most of the colo- nies, and especially in* New England, against the clergy, and even many of the laity of the Church of England, as the Protestant Episcopal Church was called. There were many reasons for this prejudice. For a long time Archbishop Seeker and others had labored zealously in efforts to establish Episcopacy in America, which the colo- nists regarded as another form of oppression, because it was so intimately connected with the throne ; so they strenuously resisted such efforts. Sometimes newspaper and pamphlet controversies on the subject ran high, and were Very bitter. Cooper, of King's College, Auchmuty, Chandler, and other Episcopal clergymen, kept their pens quite actively engaged, while William Livingston, of New Jersey, was equally active with his pen, in opposition. The Church clergy constantly harped upon, and were in favor of the absurd doctrines of passive obedience, non-resistance, and the divine right of Kings, and were active in endeavors to produce divisions among the patriots. The fact that for several years previous to the Revolution, the whole bench of Bishops, in the British Parliament, were opposed to the colonists, and always advised coercive measures, made their class obnoxious to the patriots. Again, the Episcopal clergy gener- 192 Notes. ally took sides with the Crown, and joined in the hue and cry against the leading Whigs. One of their writers, in Hugh G-aine's New York Mer- cury, in 1768, supposed to have been Dr. Auch- muty, of Trinity Church, or Professor Vardell, of King's College, thus alluded to Livingston, in a long poem. It must be remembered that Liv- ingston wrote anonymously : " Some think him a Tindall, some think him a Chubb, Some think him a Ranter, that sports from his tub ; Some think him a Newton, some think him a Locke, Some think him a Stone, some think him a Stock. But a Stock he at least may thank Nature for giving, And if he's a Stone, I pronounce it a Living." 55 The stories of the wonderful exploits of St. Anthony and his pigs, and of St. Austin preach- ing to the fishes, are told in the Popish legends. 56 William Walter, D. D., was rector of Trinity Church, Summer street, Boston. He was placed over that congregation in 1768, and left his people early in 1776, after this canto of M'Fingal was written. He was an addressor of Gage, and was among the proscribed and banished. He was afterwards Chaplain to De Lancey's Third Bat- talion of American Loyalists, and at the close of the war he went to Nova Scotia, and took charge of a church at Shelburne. He died at Boston, in the year 1800. Before he left his flock in Boston, he preached many furious discourses against rebellion, and often warned his people of Notes. *93 the dangers of the halter that awaited those who lifted their hands against " the powers that be." 57 Samuel Auchmuty, D. D., was the son of an eminent lawyer and Judge of Admiralty, in Massachusetts. He was a graduate of Harvard College, and received his Doctorate of Divinity from Oxford, England. He was chosen rector of Trinity Church, in New York, on the death of Dr. Barclay, in 1764, and continued his connec- tion until the summer of 1776, when, with his family, he retired to New Jersey. He died the following spring. His sermons, before the break- ing out of the war, were strongly denunciatory of the Sons of Liberty, as the associated patriots were called, the most prominent of whom, in New York, was Isaac Sears, (commonly known as " King Sears,") who was a member of his church, and at the close of the war, was a vestryman. In April, 1775, Dr. Auchmuty wrote from New York to Captain Montressor, Gage's Chief Engineer in Boston : " We have lately been plagued with a rascally Whig mob here, but they have effected nothing, only Sears, the King, was rescued at the jail door. [See note 69.] * * * Our magistrates have not the spirit of a louse." 58 Samuel Peters, D. D., was a native of Hebron, Connecticut, a graduate of Yale College, and a Tory Episcopal clergyman. His loyalty and his lack of judgment led him into many difficul- ties, and he became exceedingly obnoxious to the 9 194 Notes. Whigs. He was compelled to sign retractions and declarations, but, finding Hebron too hot for him, he fled to Boston, and took shelter under the British flag. He seems to have indulged a peculiar spite against his native State, and pro- posed a scheme for wiping it off the list of Com- monwealths, partitioning it between New York and Massachusetts. He went to England, and re- mained abroad until 1805, when he returned to America. In the meanwhile, he was elected Bishop of Vermont, but declined the honor. He had also written a History of Connecticut, which is a contemptible libel, and full of untruths. He never acknowledged being the author, but the fact is well known. In the years 1817 and 1818, he journeyed to the far North West, even to the Falls of St. Anthony. He died at New York on the 19th of April, 1826, aged 90 years, and was buried at Hebron. 59 Myles Cooper, D. D., was President of King's (now Columbia) College, at the commencement of the Revolution, and for some years previous. He was educated at Oxford, England, came to Amer- ca in 1762, and the next year was made President of the College. His opposition to the patriots was violent and unrelenting, yet some of the students under his care, among whom was Alexander Ham- ilton, boldly defied his menaces. He became very obnoxious to the Whigs; and, finally, feeling alarmed for his personal safety, he fled in haste Notes. 195 from the College, took refuge in Stuyvesant's house, near the East River, and made his escape on board the Asia, a British man-of-war. He went to England soon afterward, and never returned. He died suddenly at Edinburgh, in 1785, at the age of fifty years. Among his papers was found the following epitaph, written by him- self: 11 Here lies a priest of English blood, Who, living, liked whate'er was good ; Good company, good wine, good name, Yet never hunted after fame." c& Samuel Seabury, D. D., was the first Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in America. He was a native of New London, Connecticut, where his remains were laid at death. He took orders in the Church in London, in 1753, and became pastor of a congregation in New Bruns- wick, New Jersey. He afterwards took charge of a small flock at Jamaica, Long Island, and from there he went to Westchester county, New York, where he was settled at the commencement of the Revolution. There he took an active part with the loyalists, and was one of a large number who met at White Plains, and signed a protest against " all unlawful Congresses and Committees," and expressed their determination " to support the King and Constitution," at all hazards. These proceedings made him a mark for public indigna- tion, and when, in the autumn of 1.775, a party of 196 Notes. light horsemen from Connecticut, led by " King Sears," returned from destroying Rivington's printing press in New York, they carried Mr. Seabury with them as a prisoner to Connecticut. After his release, he became Chaplain in Colonel Fanning's American Regiment of Loyalists. He settled at New London, at the close of the war ; was consecrated bishop in Scotland in 1784, and presided over the dioceses of Connecticut and Rhode Island, until his death, in February, 1796. He was highly esteemed for his piety and learn- ing. 61 Judges, chapter v. 02 Revelations, chapter xiii. c3 A kind of paste-blacking, containing grease, and much used in those days for the preservation of shoes from the effects of water. It was made in the form of a ball. 64 A soft, friable clay, which absorbs grease, and was much used in fulling cloth. fi5 In allusion to the sale of Indulgences in the Papal Church, by which, for certain sums of money, a man was allowed to commit certain sins, and even great crimes. This practice was com- menced by Pope Leo the Third, about the year 800. Urban used them for revenue in 1090, and afterwards they were offered by the Roman Pon- tiffs as awards to the Crusaders. Clement the First made the first public sale of them in 1313 In 1517, Leo the Tenth published general Indul- Notes. *97 gences throughout Europe, and this great social grievance led to the Reformation, first in Ger- many, and then in England, in 1534. They were pardon for sins past, present, and future ; and were written upon parchment, and signed by the Pope or his legates. ti6 1 Samuel, chapter x. 67 This refers to the position of the Pope of Rome, who is also a temporal prince. 68 See Virgil's JEneid, book vi. 63 James Rivington, printer of the Royal Ga- zette, in New York, during the Revolution. He came to America from London, in 1760, estab- lished a bookstore, first in Philadelphia, and then in New York, and in 1773 commenced his paper, first called the Royal Gazetteer. No man was more detested by the Whigs than Riviugton, and his paper received the name of the Lying Gazette. Frenau, another poet of the Revolution, gave him many hard blows ; and at public meetings he was everywhere denounced. In the autumn of 1775, a party of light horsemen from Connecticut, led by Isaac Sears, (one of the chiefs of the Sons of Liberty in New York,) rode into the city, dis- mounted in front of Rivington's printing office, and deliberately destroyed his press, and carried off his types. The following year, when the British had taken possession of New York, he was appointed King's Printer, resumed the publi- cation of his paper, and continued it until the 198 Notes. close of the war, when, to the astonishment of all, he remained in the city unmolested, while far less sinful loyalists felt compelled to flee to Canada and Nova Scotia. The reason is in the fact, that he was false to his royal master, and that during the latter years of the war, while he was abusing the Whigs the most, he was secretly conveying intelli- gence to General Washington of all the important movements of the British in the city. See Los- sing's Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution, ii., 591. Kivington died in New York in July, 1802, at the age of seventy-eight years. ,0 Crean Brush was a conceited and sycophantic loyalist in New York. He was a native of Cum- berland county, (now forming a part of the southern portion of Vermont, next to New York,) and member of the Assembly. In February, 1775, he made a speech against the appointment of delegates to the second Continental Congress, which was published. It was answered by Philip Schuyler and G-eorge Clinton. He continually opposed Whig measures ; and after the battle of Bunker Hill, we find him in Boston, ready, with supple muscles, to do the will of General Howe, in damaging the patriots. 71 Dr. Myles Cooper, referred to in note 59. 72 Isaac Wilkins, D. D., was the son of a rich West India planter, and when quite young was sent to New York to be educated. He prepared himself for the ministry, but did not take orders Notes. 199 until some years afterward. He settled in West- chester county, became a member of the New York Assembly, and was considered a leader on the ministerial side. He had great influence, and chiefly through his instrumentality, a resolution to pass a vote of thanks to the New York Delegates to the Continental Congress, offered by the early martyr, Nathaniel Woodhull, was lost. His speech in opposition to the appointment of Dele- gates to the Second Continental Congress, is pre- served in Sabine's Lives of the American Loyal- ists. He was very obnoxious to the Whigs, and young Alexander Hamilton became his opponent with the pen. Wilkins soon abandoned the county, went to England, but returned to Long Island in 1776. There he remained until the end of the war, when he retired to Shelburne, in Nova Scotia. In the meanwhile he had taken orders in the Church ; and in the year 1800, he became rec- tor of an Episcopal parish in Westchester county, where he continued in the ministry until his death, in 1830, at the age of eighty-nine years. 1Z Samuel Chandler was a High Church clergy- man, in New York, and was one of the earliest in that city to denounce the measures of the Sons of Libert}^. He became very obnoxious to the Whigs, and in 1775, he went to England, and never returned. 74 Benjamin Booth was a stanch loyalist, and was for a time Secretary of the Loyal Refugees 200 Notes. of the different colonies, whose head-quarters were in New York, under the protection of British arms. He called a meeting of the loyalists in that city in September, 1778, when, it appears, about two thousand of them were present. 75 A series of well-written essays, against Whig measures, over the signature of " Massachusett- ensis," were published in Boston papers, between December, 1774, and April, 1775. The authorship was long attributed to Jonathan Sewall, but they were really the production of Daniel Leonard, of Taunton, Massachusetts, who was one of the Mandamus Council. [See note 85]. Leonard was a graduate of Harvard College, was bred to the law, and became an acute logician, and power- ful political writer. He was a member of the General Court of Massachusetts, and was one of the barristers, who, in 1774, signed an address to Governor Hutchinson. Bullets were fired into his house by a mob, and he took refuge in Boston in May, 1775. In 1776 he accompanied the British army to Halifax, and afterward became Chief Justice of the Bermudas. He died in London in 1829, at the age of eighty -nine years. His essays, above alluded to, were answered by John Adams, over the signature of Ci Novanglus," in a series published between January and the 19th of April, 1775. Both were reprinted in 1819 with a preface by Mr. Adams. Those powerful and widely-scattered engines 75 Notes. 201 of the Revolution, Committees of Correspondence, became exceedingly hateful to the government and the loyalists. Massachusetts and Virginia have disputed the honor of originating them. They seem to have been conceived by leading pa- triots almost simultaneously in both colonies, in 1773, and in 1774; they existed all over the land. They were the depositories and distributors of secret information of every kind, and through them, concert of political action was seen every- where, from New Hampshire to Georgia. Of these " Massachusettensis " said, " This is the foul- est, subtlest, and most venomous serpent ever issued from the egg of sedition. It is the source of the rebellion. I saw the small seed when it was implanted; [by Samuel Adams] it was a grain of mustard. I have watched the plant until it has become a great tree. The vilest reptiles that crawl upon the earth are concealed at the root ; the foulest birds of the air rest upon its branches. I now would induce you to go to work immedi- ately with axes and hatchets to cut it down, for a twofold reason ; because it is a pest to society, and lest it be felled suddenly, by a stronger arm, and crush its thousands in its fall." 77 Thomas Hutchinson, Governor of Massachu- setts, from 1771 until superseded by Gage, in the spring of 1774. He was a native of that province, held many important public offices, and wrote a valuable history of his native colony. Some of his 202 Notes. obnoxious acts will be referred to hereafter. He became alarmed for his personal safety, and fled to England. The allusion of the poet is to a laudatory address which loyalists and timid Whigs presented to him, just before his departure. He died in England in June, 1780. 78 Jonathan Sewall was a native of Massachu- setts, was educated at Harvard College, became a school teacher, and then a lawyer, and at about the year 1767, was appointed Attorney-General of Massachusetts. It is believed that he was dis- posed to take part with the Whigs, but had not the courage. He and John Adams were intimate friends, and that friendship was not broken, even after Sewall became one of the addressors of Hutchinson in 1774. Later in the season, he tried to persuade Adams not to attend the Conti- nental Congress, when the firm patriot used those remarkable words : " The die is now cast ; I have now passed the Rubicon ; swim or sink, live or die survive or perish, with my country, is my unal- terable determination." They never met again until after the war. Judge Sewall became Gage's chief adviser, and, it is said, wrote most of his proclamations. He was an essayist of some dis- tinction. His house at Cambridge was attacked by a mob, and he fled to Boston ; and in 1775 he went to England, and resided at Bristol. In 1788, he came to America, and was made Judge of Admiralty in the province of New Brunswick. Notes. 203 He died there in 1796, at the age of sixty-eight years. His wife was a sister of Dorothy Quincy, wife of John Hancock. 19 Nathaniel Mills and John Hicks were printers of a ministerial paper in Boston. They opened a printing-house, as partners, in School street, in 1773, and their paper, the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Post Boy, became the government organ in that city. The commencement of hos- tilities, in 1775, put an end to their paper, and the following spring they accompanied the refugee loyalists who fled to Halifax with the British army, when Washington drove it out of Boston. They afterwards opened a stationery store in New York, and printed some for the royal army and navy. They were among the New York refugees who fled to Nova Scotia, at the close of the war. 80 Margaret, was the widow of Richard Draper, printer of the Massachusetts Gazette and News Letter, who died in Boston, in June, 1774. Mrs. Draper continued the paper after the death of her husband. She became his successor as printer to the Governor and Council, and continued business while the British were in possession of Boston. It was the first and the last newspaper published in Boston, previous to the Declaration of Indepen- dence. Mrs. Draper went to Halifax with the army, and from thence accompanied friends to England, where she received a pension until her death, a few years afterward. 204 Notes. sl Judge Sewall wrote a farce called America Arouse. It was a dull affair — a farce of itself, aud not to be lauglied at. s2 The oppressive provisions of the Boston Port Bill, went into effect on the first of June, 1774. The Provincial Congress of Massachusetts ap- pointed that clay as one of solemn fasting and prayer, for the people of the province. 83 In various places the people had signed a League, agreeing not to import or use tea in any way, while a duty levied by government without the consent of the colonists, remained upon that article. Yet men were found among loyalists bold enough to brave public opinion by becoming consignees. Intelligence reached America that ships laden with tea were crossing the ocean. The people gathered, and made preparations in several seaport towns to prevent the landing of the cargoes. Two tea ships arrived in Boston, late in 1773. The consignees were warned of danger, but refused to listen. They were threat- ened by mobs ; and one of them, Richard Clarke, had his house damaged by missies thrown by a crowd of excited people. Finally, on the evening of the 16th of December, a party, many of them disguised, went on board the tea ships, and cast their contents into Boston Harbor. The con- signees were despised as supple tools of the British ministry, and this popular demonstration Notes. 205 kept them quiet and inactive ever afterward. See note 31, Canto iii. ?4 Peter Oliver, a native of Massachusetts, was made, first a Judge of the Superior Court, and then Chief Justice of the province, notwithstand- ing he was not bred a lawyer, nor possessed a knowledge of legal science. He was graduated at Harvard in 1730, and possessed some learning and fair abilities, but was totally unfit for the high office which he held. Because he received his salary direct from the crown, instead of the people of Massachusetts, and thus became independent of the latter, he was impeached in 1774, and soon afterward went to England. He died at Birmino-- ham, in the autumn of 1791. 85 A writ of mandamus is a command from a high power, to any person, corporation, or inferior court, requiring them to do some specified act which appertains to their office or duty. By the charter of Massachusetts, the Council had always been elective, but by one of the bills passed by Parliament in the spring of 1774, that charter was declared void, and the King appointed a council by mandamus. They were, of course, chosen from among the loyalists, and many of them accepted the office, and took the prescribed oath. These councillors became very detestable to the Whigs, who regarded their act as equivalent to joining the crown in its oppressions. 206 Notes. 86 " A proper emblem of his genius," says Trumbull. 87 John Murray was a native of Rutland, in Massachusetts, a colonel of militia, and for several years a member of the General Court. He was one of the Mandamus Council, but was not sworn into office. Menaced by the "Whigs, he abandoned his house in the night, fled to Boston, and accom- panied the British army to Halifax in 1776. After the war, Colonel Murray became a resident of St. Johns, New Brunswick. His large pro- perty in the United States was confiscated, yet he left a handsome estate in St. Johns. 83 Timothy Ruggles was an old stager in public life, having been a member of the Massachusetts Assembly as early as 1736. He was a man of de- cided talents and energy, a lawyer by profession, but for many years was a tavern-keeper in Sandwich. He loved military life, attained to the rank of a brigadier-general, and led a body of troops to join Sir William Johnson, in 1755. He was distin- guished in the battle at the head of Lake George that year. Two years afterward, he was appointed a Judge ; and in 1765, he was one of the Massa- chusetts delegates to the " Stamp Act Congress," assembled at New York. He was President of that body, but his conduct was so loyal toward the crown, that he was censured by the Assembly of his province. When the Revolution broke out, he was a violent opponent of the Whigs, and Notes. 207 crowned his detested acts by becoming a Manda- mus Councillor. His house was attacked, his cattle were injured, and in terror, he fled to Boston, and endeavored to raise a volunteer corps of loyalists. He then proposed associations to act against the Whigs; and when the British army fled to Halifax, he was among the refugee loyalists who accompanied it. He afterwards appeared upon Long Island and Staten Island, and succeeded in raising a military corps of about three hundred men, called the Loyal Militia, but he did not per- form much service with them. His property was confiscated in 1779, and he went to Nova Scotia at the conclusion of the war. He died in 1798, at the age of eighty-seven years. Mercy Warren, in her drama called The Group, gives him the character of Hate-all, because he was a sort of social Ishmael. * 9 Josiah Edson, of Bridgewater, Massachusetts, was an active politician, and was known by the odious names of Bescinder and Mandamus Coun- cillor. He was a man of weak courage, and was rather a passive than an active loyalist, yet a mob attacked his house, and he was compelled to flee to Boston for safety, in 1774. He went to Halifax in 1776, and afterwards became a resident in the city (or its vicinity) of New York, where he died. He is represented as an amiable, virtuous and highly respectable man. But mobs make no distinction of persons, if their avowed principles are offensive. 208 Notes 90 Nathaniel Ray Thomas was a resident of Marshfield, and a graduate of Harvard University in 1751. Having become a member of the Mandamus Council, he shared in the afflictions of that unhappy body, who seemed to receive the special attention of mobs. He went to Halifax in 1776, and in 1778 his property was confiscated. He died in Nova Scotia in 1791. 91 This was Joshua Loring, of Massachusetts, whose property was confiscated, and himself ban- ished. He became British commissary of prison- ers in Boston, and is charged with the perpetra- tion of most outrageous cruelties toward them. It is affirmed that when he fled to England, his wife did not accompany him, but remained as mis- tress of General Sir William Howe. An allusion is made to her in Francis Hopkinson's Battle of the Kegs, as " Mrs. L g." Loring left be- hind him a name most odious, and he never re- turned to America. He died in England, in 1782. 92 Sir William Pepperell was a descendant of the first of that name, who settled in Maine, and was knighted by William the Third. He was educated at Harvard University, and was after- wards one of the Council of Massachusetts. He was continued in that office under the mandamus of the King in 1774, and, of course, became very odious to the people. He was denounced by his neighbors, and in fear he fled to Boston. He and his wife started for England in 1775, but she died Notes. 20 g on the passage. He was proscribed and banished by the act of 1778, and the following year his property was confiscated, under the conspiracy act. Ho was an active, benevolent and very useful citizen, and became one of the founders of the British and Foreign Bible Society. He was also Presi- dent of the Association of Loyalists, in London, formed in 1779. He never returned to America.' He died at his residence on Portman Square, in December, 1816, at the age of seventy years. He appears in West's celebrated picture, the " Recep- tion of the American Loyalists by Great Britain, in 1783," a copy of which may be found in Lossing's Field Book of the Revolution, vol. ii. page 667. 93 William Browne was a grandson of Governor Burnet, was owner of an immense landed estate, and was one of the hated Mandamus Councillors' He was an active and popular man in Massachu- setts, prior to the Revolution. He was compelled to leave in 1776 ; and in 1779, his property was confiscated, and he became an exile in England. Afterward he was appointed Governor of the Bermudas. He died in England in 1802. 94 John Erving, Jr., of Boston, was an addressor of both Hutchinson and Gage, and a Mandamus Councillor. He was therefore double-dyed in iniquity in the eyes of the Whigs. He fied to Halifax in 1776, and from thence to England. He was perpetually banished, and his property being confiscated by the conspiracy act of 1779, 210 Notes. he never returned to his native country. He died in England in 1816, at the age of eighty-nine years. 95 Henry the Eighth, of England, established Protestantism as the religion of the State, at about the middle of the sixteenth century, and during the reign of his son Edward, which commenced in 1574, the tangible line of doctrinal difference between Luther and Calvin was drawn. The fol- lowers of the former allowed many of the ceremo- nials of the Church of Rome. Those of the latter were more austere, demanded more simplicity in the public worship, and great purity of Kfe. On the latter account, they were called Puritans, in derision. They were afterwards persecuted by both the Roman Catholics and the English church- men. Many fled to Holland, and from the Puritan congregation there, came the Pilgrim Fathers, who commenced settlements in New England, in 1620. 96 Harrison Gray was Treasurer, or Receiver- General of Massachusetts. He was an addressor of Hutchinson, and one of Gage's Mandamus Council. He became greatly detested by the Whigs on that account, and especially because of a pamphlet which he wrote, in which he charged the Congress of Philadelphia with being drunk when they signed the Continental Association. A copy of the Association may be found in the journals of the first Congress, in 1774. At the evacuation Notes. 211 of Boston by the British, he went, with others, to Halifax, and from thence to England, where he died. On leaving, he parted with his only daugh- ter, who was the first wife of Samuel Otis, father of the late Harrison Gray Otis, of Boston. Mr. Gray was an excellent man, in every relation of life, and did not deserve the harsh language here made use of by the poet. 97 The Earl of Dartmouth succeeded the Earl of Hillsborough as Secretary of State for the Colonies in 1772, and was in that station when the Revolution broke out. He was considered rather friendly to the colonies at first ; and was always favorable to mild measures. He and Doctor Franklin were warm personal friends. os rp ne u p rmie saint " alluded to was Governor Hutchinson, who always professed great friendship for the people of his native province. His own letters proved his hypocrisy, for while he was making these professions, he was writing to the ministry, declaring the necessity, in order to maintain government in Massachusetts, of destroy- ing the charter, abridging what he termed English liberties , making Judges dependant only upon the Crown, and creating a nobility in America ! Some of these letters were secretly placed in the hands of Dr. Franklin, then Provincial Agent at the English Court, and he transmitted them to Boston. Soon afterward, (1773,) finding himself suspected of advising the ministry to employ op- 212 Notes. pressive measures, lie declared, in a message to the Assembly, that he had ever been an advocate of the rights of the province contained in the charter, and the equal liberties of the colonists with other British subjects. His letters were then published, and gave the lie to all his preten- sions. The excitement which they produced was intense, and, for a time, his person was in great danger. 99 When Hutchinson fled to England, a spirit of revenge, uniting with his real sentiments respecting government in America, caused him to strongly urge Lord North to turn the screw of oppression still closer, and he remained a bitter and uncompromising enemy of the Americans. 10n After the events at Lexington and Concord, Boston was menaced by an exasperated multitude, and General Gage became alarmed. He aban- doned his haughty tone and demeanor, and sought an interview with the select men, as the municipal trustees were called. A town meeting was held on the 22d of April, and an agreement was entered into between the local authorities and the Governor, " That upon the inhabitants in general lodging their arms in Faneuil Hall, or any other convenient place, under the care of the select men, marked with the names of their respective owners, all such inhabitants that are inclined, might leave the town with their families and effects," &c.,&c. The Tories remonstrated with Gage, and working Notes. 213 upon his fears in another way, caused him to put obstacles in the way of the people who desired to leave, and finally, to refuse to grant passes alto- gether. He concluded it was better to keep the Whigs in the city, as hostages for the good beha- vior of their brethren outside, for really, " They were the only guards that saved him." 103 When the news of the skirmishes at Lexing- ton and Concord swept over New England, the people flocked toward Boston by hundreds and thousands, resolved to chain the tiger upon that peninsula, or drive him into the sea. Israel Putnam, a veteran of the French and Indian War, and then a brigadier-general of the Connecticut militia, was among the earliest of the rallying minute-men of the East, and took command of the motley host by common consent, at first. Gage well knew the spirit of the man, and was in daily expectation that he would force his way into Boston, and " mutton him ; " in other words, destroy him and his army. Putnam was afterwards appointed one of the four major- generals, commissioned by Congress to assist in the command of the Continental Army ; and, he served his country well, until disabled by paralysis, in 1779. He lived in retirement after the war, and died in Brooklyn, Wyndham county, Con- necticut, on the 29th of May, 1790, at the age of seventy-two years. 214 Notes. m Numbers, chapter xxx. 103 In 1766, the Sons of Liberty, in New York, as the associated patriots who opposed the Stamp Act were called, after dining at Montague's, and procuring the sanction of the Governor, erected a mast or tall pole a little north-east of the present City Hall, in front of Warren street, and upon it was inscribed, " To his most gracious majesty, George the Third, Wm. Pitt and Liberty." These poles were erected afterward, and elsewhere, and became known as " Liberty poles," a name which they still bear. Around these poles the patriots as- sembled, and near them they sometimes punished Tory offenders, by stripping them naked, pouring warm tar over them, and then emptying a bag of feathers upon them. There were certain large trees in Boston, Norwich, Charleston and other places, where the Whigs assembled, which were called Liberty trees. These became very obnoxious to the friends of government, and attempts were often made to cut them down. The one in Boston, which stood at the corner of the present Washington and Essex streets, opposite the Boylston Market, was cut down by the British in 1775, with great parade. A soldier was killed by falling from its branches, during the operation, of whom some poetic wit of the day wrote : " Pale turned the wretch — lie spread each helpless hand, But spread in vain — with headlong force he fell, Nor stopped descending till he stopped in hell ! " Notes. 215 104 This is in allusion to the church discipline of New England, when a person was obliged to stand in the aisle, called the " broad alley," name the offence he had committed, and ask pardon of his brethren. CANTO II 1 This refers to the thrice-repeated words " Oh yes ! " used in opening courts,, and as a preface to verbal proclamations, and the commencement of the business of public meetings. 2 The person here alluded to, was William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, who was the Primate, or Chief Ecclesiastical officer of England, during a portion of the reign of Charles the First. He succeeded Abbot as primate, in 1633, and at the same time he was the prime minister of State. He held these exalted offices with a firm and steady rein, and with great energy he endeavored to re- press the Puritan spirit. The persecutions which he employed drove some of the best men from England to America ; and, it is said, that even John Hampden, and Oliver Cromwell, were, at one time, on the eve of embarkation for the New World. Laud became very obnoxious to all who disliked the hierarchy, and he was accused of high crimes, which were not proven against him. Popular 216 Notes. hatred demanded his blood. The peers, overborne by the prevailing sentiment, pronounced him guilty, and he was beheaded on Tower Hill, on the 10th of January, 1645, when 71 years of age. That was four years before his royal master met the same fate. Laud was an honest but mis- taken man. We must judge him by the spirit of the times in which he lived. 3 In the edition of M'Fingal, revised by the author and published in 1820, there are the four following lines, immediately preceding this : " Who'd seen, except for these restraints, Your Witches, Quakers, Whigs, and Saints, Or heard of Mather's famed Magnalia, If Charles and Laud had chanced to fail you ? " The allusion to Cotton Mather refers to his book called Magnolia, in which he gives a ridiculous history of pretended miracles which occurred during the first years of the settlement of New England. In his "Wonders of the Invisible World," Mather gave an account of the delusion known as the Salem Witchcraft. Mather was a man of learning, yet he was a believer in witches. Although the settlements in America were nearly all made by private individuals, and at the expense of private capital, the King claimed to own the lands discovered by his subjects in the New World, and they were compelled to procure grants from him, by which certain privileges were Notes. 217 given to the proprietor, who made the settlements. These charters were the original fundamental laws of all the colonies. That given to Rhode Island by Charles the Second remained in force as the Con- stitution of the State until 1843, when the people made a new one. The first charters were often annulled, and new ones were given ; and those charters in which privileges were defined were regarded by the people with great reverence. I have already referred in Note 30, Canto I., to the boasts of English statesmen, concerning aids given to the colonists. 4 Although the ancient feud between France and England, as well as a difference in religion, caused the English and French settlers in America to regard each other as rivals, yet it was doubtless the quarrels of the parent government that made them actual and open enemies, and brought them into bloody conflicts. And in those wars the colonists bore much more than their own proper share of the burden. 5 Generals Braddock, Abercrombie, Amherst, Loudoun, Wolfe and others, were sent over to con- duct the war that broke out in 1755, and oftentimes by their folly, arrogance, or tardiness, they thwarted the more enterprising provincials, and stood in the way of success. On the field where Braddock was killed, death and desolation were spread in all directions, until the fall of that officer, and others, placed the command in the hands of young Wash- 10 218 Notes. ington, when the fortunes of the day were imme- diately changed. In almost every instance, the provincial officers were more efficient than those of the regular army. The history of the tardiness and stupidity of Loudoun forms a disgraceful chap- ter in the records of England. Wolfe and Am- herst were the most efficient of all the English of- ficers who were sent to America during the French and Indian War. 6 The energy and justice of Pitt were greatly applauded by the Americans ; and when, in the spring of 1759, his splendid scheme for the con- quest of Canada was to be put into execution, the provincials flocked to the standards of their chiefs with such alacrity, that the quota of soldiers called for was far exceeded by numbers. When Amherst came, he found twenty thousand troops at his dis- posal, and many others were eager to join the royal army. 7 The first step toward the establishment of Episcopacy in America was at about the year 1748, when Dr. Seeker, archbishop of Canterbury, not only proposed the matter, but offered the mitre to several Puritan divines. Whitefield, the cele- brated field-preacher, said to Dr. Langdon, of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, at about that time, " I can't in conscience leave this town without ac- quainting you with a secret. My heart bleeds for America, poor. New England ! There is a deep-laid plot against both your civil and religious Notes. 219 liberties, and they will be lost. Your golden days are at an end — you have nothing but trouble be- fore you Your liberties will be lost." He referred to the scheme then in preparation by the English hierarchy. The first important step was the sending over several Episcopal clergymen as missionaries, who had been ordained by the Bishop of London. These settled in the colonies; and those at the North, especially, became attached to the royal cause. The intention was to have the New England churches ruled by bishops ; but the Revolution swept the whole plan into oblivion. s The simple fact of sending troops to America to awe the people, produced much irritation in the provinces ; but when the colonists were called upon to contribute toward the support of these troops, they regarded the matter as downright op- pression. The New York Assembly refused to vote supplies, and for this contumacious act, Par- liament, in 1767, passed an act, " prohibiting the Governor, Council, and Assembly of New York, passing any legislative act for any purpose what- ever." This alarming disability caused the legis- lature of that province to make some concessions, yet the point was not yielded until 1769, when a small appropriation was made for the support of the troops. In Boston, the insolence of the troops greatly irritated the people, and finally they came to an open rupture early in March, 1770, which resulted in the death of several citizens. This 220 Notes. event is known in history as The Boston Massa- cre. So in Wilmington in North Carolina, and in Charleston in South Carolina, and other places, the people were exceedingly rcstiff under the frowns of a military despotism. 9 It has been asserted that a large portion of the old English peerage, created previous to the close of the reign of Charles the Second, have originated from the illegitimate progeny of the kings. It is to this fact, and the grievance of having such men bold all of the best offices of trust and emolument in the kingdom, that the author here alludes. ] " At that time the urgent calls of an exchequer, depleted by recent wars and increasing pensions, caused the levying of very heavy taxes, even in Scotland and Ireland, where, hitherto, they had been less than in England. The Scotch mur- mured, and the Irish endured the burden with a bad grace, while the English people themselves, borne down by taxation, sympathized with their brethren in America, in their resistance to the same form of oppression. The chief cause of com- plaint was the pensioning of, and giving sinecure places to, undeserving scions of royalty or the aris- tocracy. And the Americans justly complained that the best offices in the colonies were filled by such men, to the exclusion of native-born citizens, who could justly boast of superior intelligence and virtue. 11 Sir David Dalrymple was a ministerial writer Notes. 221 of some eminence, and a lawyer and antiquarian of note in Edinburgh. He undertook at one time to prove that all of the celebrated British patriots, in the time of the civil war, were pensioners, in the pay of France. He based his charges upon the alleged fact, that the letters of the French am- bassadors in England disclosed the significant se- cret, that thousands of guineas were paid by them to Algernon Sydney, John Hampden, &c. He also alleged that Admiral Russell defeated the French fleet at a time when he was under a solemn engagement, and had received a stipulated sum, to be beaten himself. How far truth will support a theory founded on these alleged facts, cannot be easily determined. But it was from premises like these, that Sir David argued that " public virtue was but a name." 12 Dr. Samuel Johnson also wrote against the Americans. His pamphlet entitled Taxation no Tyranny is an able paper. He, too, had no faith in patriots so called, and in public virtue. Like Cardinal Richelieu, he believed that every man had his price. A poet of the time, in an epigram, intimated that the doctor's price was paid to him for his defence of ministers. 13 This is in allusion to the noble words of Samuel Adams, in the first Continental Congress, when a proposition of Joseph Galloway to make con- cessions to Great Britain elicited a warm debate. Adams regarded the proposition as a concession to 222 Notes. tyranny, and, his soul kindling with patriotic zeal, he exclaimed : "I should advise persisting in our struggle for liberty, though it were revealed from Heaven that nine hundred and ninety-nine were to perish, and only one of a thousand were to sur- vive and retain his liberty ! One such freeman must possess more virtue, and enjoy more happi- ness, than a thousand slaves ; and let him propo- gate his like, and transmit to them what he has so nobly preserved." 14 Sir Jeffrey Amherst, who commanded the British troops in America, in the final conquest of Canada. 15 Amherst declared, on the floor of the House of Commons, that with five thousand regular troops, he could march from one end of the con- tinent to the other, unmolested. G-age repeated the foolish boast to Putnam, who instantly replied, " So you might, if they behaved themselves, and paid for what they got ; if not, the women would knock your soldiers in the head with their ladles." 16 Colonel Grant was a meritorious officer in the French and Indian War, and was the successful leader of an expedition against the Cherokees in 1761. He was a brigadier at the commencement of the Revolution, and led the division of the British army in the battle near Brooklyn, at the close of the summer of 1776, which first engaged the Americans under Lord Stirling. Grant made assertions simi- Notes. 223 lar to those of Amherst, and added that nothing would exceed the speed of the Americans in their flight before an enemy. On several occasions during the Revolution, General Grant was com- pelled to run swiftly before the " rebels " he af- fected so much to despise, but never after them. At this he seems to have been very expert, and " Well skilled on runnings to decide." 17 It is asserted that the roar of a lion will turn small beer sour. The lion is the emblem of Great Britain's courage and strength, and is the principal figure on the national escutcheon. It was origi- nally a leopard, according to a record of the year 1252. 18 Such declarations were continually made by North and his cabinet. They asserted the right of Parliament to tax the colonies, and declared the necessity of such a tax for the purposes of reve- nue. 19 In the debate on the Boston Port Bill, in the spring of 1774, Mr. Van, a ministerial member of Parliament, used very violent language toward the people of Boston. " They ought to have their town knocked about their ears, and destroyed," he said, because of their destruction of the car- goes of tea in that harbor, a few months before ; and concluded his tirade of abuse by quoting the words of Cato the Censor, concerning Carthage, 224 Notes. Delenda est Carthago — Carthage must be des- troyed. 20 It cannot be doubted that among the measures for crushing the rising rebellion in America, adopted by the British ministry early in 1774, was that of exciting the Indians on the frontiers of the white settlements against their neighbors. In this work, a little later, the sons of Sir Wil- liam Johnson, in the Mohawk Valley, were engaged. Stuart, in the Carolinas, was busy among the Creeks and other frontier tribes ; and the Governors of some of the provinces had, doubtless, secret instructions on this point. Gov- ernor Gage and Governor Dimmore, of Virginia, were known to be employed in this nefarious business in 1775. In the autumn of that year, Dr. Connolly, of Pittsburg, visited General Gage, at Boston, and soon afterward, while on his way toward the Ohio country, through Maryland, he was arrested as a suspicious character. Concealed in his saddle were papers, which revealed the fact that he was commissioned to arouse and lead the Indians against the people of Virginia. Gov- ernor Carleton, of Canada, was also engaged in the same business ; and the effect of the agency of secret emissaries among the savages, was seen as the war progressed, in the terrible massacres every- where committed by the Indians, under the pro- tecting wing of British power. The horrid prac- tice of employing the Indians was severely com- Notes. 225 mented upon in the British Parliament. A mem- ber attempted to justify the measure by saying, that they had a right to employ the means " which God and nature had put into their hands." The great Pitt scornfully repeated these words, and said, " These abominable principles, and this most abominable avowal of them, demands most deci- sive indignation. I call upon that right reverend bench (pointing to the Bishops), those holy minis- ters of the Gospel and pious pastors of the Church, I conjure them to join in the holy work, and to vindicate the religion of their God." But " those holy ministers" had no word of condemnation. In the Declaration of Independence the King was charged with endeavors " to bring on the inhabi- tants of our frontiers the merciless Indian sava- ges," and the proofs of the truth of that charge were many and undeniable. 21 Guy Carleton (afterward Lord Dorchester), was Governor of Canada from 1772 to 1781, when he succeeded Sir Henry Clinton as Commander- in-Chief of the British army in America. He was made Governor of Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick in 1786. As a reward for long- services he was raised to the peerage. He died in 1808, at the age of eighty-five years. It is due to his memory to say, that he doubtless was opposed to the employment of the savages against the Americans. He was a very humane man, as his kindness to American prisoners often proved. 0* 226 Notes. Guy Johnson was a son of Sir William John- son, by a sister of Brant, the great Mohawk Chief. He had great influence over the Iroquois, and in 1775 he, in connection with the Butlers and Brant, held a large council of Indians, composed chiefly of Cayugas and Senecas. After the war he was an Indian agent in Canada. 22 Guy, Earl of Warwick, was called the King- maker. He was killed at the battle of Barnet in April, 1471. He is very celebrated in the martial annals of Great Britain. 23 The Dun cow is celebrated in tradition as a fierce animal that roamed over a heath, and had killed many people. She was twelve feet in height from hoof to shoulder, and eighteen feet in length from the neck to the root of the tail. The young and fiery Guy undertook to kill the beast, in order to win a mistress. He did so, and the heath still bears the name of Dunsmore. This is supposed to be a myth, and that the cow was a Countess, who led a disreputable life, and ruined many young- lords by winning their estates from them at card- playing. Guy beat her at the game, and so the destroyer was conquered. - 4 Among the threats of royal Governors in the slave-holding provinces, was that of giving these bond-servants their freedom, and letting them loose, like bloodhounds, upon their masters. And this was no idle threat. Nothing but the general attachment of the slaves to their masters prevented Notes. 227 the perpetration of the most frightful massacres. When, in June, 1775, Lord Dunmore, the Governor of Virginia, fled for safety to a British man-of-war, his first vindictive and retaliatory efforts were to call the slaves to his standard, under a promise of free- dom. Many obeyed the call, and were in the bat- tle at the Great Bridge, twelve miles from Nor- folk, in December following. Hundreds of them afterwards miserably perished. The same thing was attempted, by authority, in the Carolinas ; and in Boston a company of negroes was formed and regularly enrolled. Yet the negroes were not all " loyal," for we find that, on one occasion, when they had been ordered to assemble in Faneuil Hall, to choose from among their number proper per- sons to clean the streets, Caesar Merrian, in the presence of Joshua Levering, moderator, dared to oppose the measure, for which he " was committed to prison, and confined until the streets were all cleaned." The Declaration of Independence says, " He has excited domestic insurrection among us," and these facts are the proofs. :5 This was a specimen of M'Fingal's " second sight," for there was, as yet, no Bishop in America. 26 The negroes who enlisted in the army in Bos- ton were chiefly slaves of the whigs who had left the town. They were dressed in the scarlet uni- form of the British army, a color particularly adapted to win the black man, who is fond of show. 228 Notes. - 1 " The stones and all the elements with thee Shall ratify a strict confed'racy ; Wild beasts their savage temper shall forget, And for a firm alliance with thee treat." Blackmore 1 s Paraphrase of Job. 28 These were the materials employed against the Americans by the British ministry previous to the sending over German troops, mentioned in Note 15, Canto I. 29 "When Gage proceeded to Boston to enforce the Bort Bill, he ordered two additional regiments to march there. They entered Boston with great display, and encamped on the Common, or Mall. Other troops soon joined them, and as the people refused to give them shelter, they all remained en- camped on the Common during the summer of 1774. The contending political parties wrote and published much. Massachusettensis (See Note 75, Canto I.) began his essays, and John Adams soon answered them. Gage sent out proclamation after proclamation, and the patriots met him with " squib for squib" at every turn. His proclama- tions were very bombastic, and were much ridi culed. They were sometimes paraphrased in rhyme. The following is a specimen of one of these : " Tom Gage's proclamation, Or blustering denunciation, (Replete with defamation,) Threatening devastation Notes. 229 And speedy jugulation, Of the New English nation, Who shall his pious ways-shun." This was the commencement. Then followed a paraphrase, and the whole ended with, " Thus graciously the war I wage, As witnesseth my hand, Tom Gage By command of Mother Carey, Thomas Flucker, Secretary. Flucker was the Secretary of Massachusetts un- der Gage. He was the father of Lucy, the wife of General Henry Knox, the Commander-in-Chief of the artillery of the Continental army. 30 Gage's fears made him more of a tyrant than he wished to be. Alarmed by hostile demonstra- tions on all sides, he first stationed a strong guard upon Boston Neck, which connected the peninsula with the main, at Roxbury, with the avowed shal- low pretence that he wished to prevent desertions from his ranks. He next commenced erecting a line of fortifications across the Neck. Boston carpenters could not be hired to do the work, and mechanics from New York were employed for the purpose. These things greatly irritated the peo- ple, because they were proofs of the manifest inten- tion of Government to coerce them into submission to unjust laws. 31 Matthew, xvii. 27. 32 Numbers, Chapter xii. 230 Notes. 33 When Rome was invested by the Gauls, al- most four hundred years before the birth of Christ, a noble band of citizens and soldiers shut them- selves up in the Capitol. One night the Gauls climbed up the steep rocks of the Capitoline Hill, and were about to kill the sentinels and capture the garrison, when some geese, being awakened by the noise, cackled so loudly that they aroused the soldiers in time to save the Capitol, and perhaps the Roman Empire. 34 See an account of Bishop Atterbury's trial, in the Histories of England. Francis Atterbury was Bishop of Rochester and Dean of Westminster. He favored the Stuarts, and being suspected of being in league with the old Pretender, son of James the Second, he was sent to the Tower on a charge of treason, in 1722. He was banished the following year, and died at Paris in 1732. 85 Exodus, Chapter viii. 35 A noodle meant simpleton. This term was much in use formerly. 37 The exact origin of Yankee Doodle, our na- tional air, is not positively known. There was a popular song adapted to the old air of Nancy Daw- son, composed and sung in derision of Cromwell, by the Cavaliers and other loyalists, which com- menced thus : " Nankey Doodle came to town, Riding on a pony, With a feather in his hat Upon a macaroni." N Q T E S . 23I A " doodle " is defined in the old English diction- aries, as " a sorry, trifling fellow," and the term was thus applied to Cromwell. A " macaroni " was a knot on the hat, on which a feather was fastened. In a satirical poem accompanying a caricature of William Pitt, published in 1766, in which he appears on stilts, the following stanza occurs : " Stamp act ! le diable ! dat is dc job, sir ; Dat is in de stiltman's nob, sir, To be America's nabob, sir. Doodle, noodle, do." The air of Yankee Doodle was known in New England, long before the Revolution, as " Lydia Fisher's Jig ; " and in 1755, a surgeon in the British army at Albany, composed a song to that air, in derision of the uncouth appearance of the New England troops then assembled there. He called it " Yankee Doodle." The air was popular as martial music ; and we find on record that when, in 1768, British troops arrived in ships in Boston harbor, " the Yankee Doodle tune was the capital piece in the band of music at Castle Wil- liam." The change in spelling the first word from Yankey to Yankee, did not occur until after the Revolution. While the army under Washington was at Cambridge, in 1775, some loyal poet wrote a long string of doggerel verse, in derision of the New England people, and troops,- commencing : 232 Notes. "Father and I went down to camp, Along with Captain Goodwin, There we see the men and boys As thick as h&stj-puddin 1 ." See Note 1, Canto I. 38 The people in Boston, and the army there, after Gage's arrival, held toward each other the most bitter animosity, and that was often inflamed by tbe wicked or injudicious conduct of subordi- nate officers. Among sinners of this kind, was Lieutenant Colonel Nesbitt, who, at the beginning of 1775, took great pains to insult and injure tbe Americans. The country people sometimes came into town, to buy muskets for hunting. On one occasion Nesbitt instructed a soldier to sell one of them an old rusty musket. The purchaser was an inoffensive man, who sold vegetables, and paid the soldier three dollars for the gun. He was al- most immediately seized under a false charge of carrying arms for a treasonable purpose, and thrown into the guard-house. Early the next morning punishment was adjudged, and he was stripped naked, furnished with a covering of tar and feathers, placed upon a cart, paraded the length of the city and back, and was taken to Liberty Tree. This brave act was performed by about thirty grenadiers of the 47th regiment, with fixed bayonets, and twenty drums and fifes playing the Rogue's March. The procession was headed by Nesbitt with a drawn sword. The indignant Notes. 233 people flocked to Liberty Tree, when the alarmed soldiers fled to their barracks, and the poor man was rescued. The origin of the punishment by tar and feathers, has been fixed at the period of the Revolution, by most writers. According to the Pictorial History of England, vol. i. page 487, quoted in Duyck- i nek's Cyclopedia of American Literature, the " plumeopicean robe " is as old as the crusaders. Richard Coeur de Lion made the regulation that " A man convicted of theft or 'pickerie,' was to have his head shaved, and hot pitch poured upon his bare pate, and over the pitch the feathers of some pillow or cushion were to be shaken, as a mark whereby he might be known as a thief. ,, 39 Caligula was the most detested of the Roman Emperors, because of his ferocious and dissipated character. In the year of our Lord 16, he led an army to the shores of Gaul, for the purpose of invading Britain, but he did not embark. He there ordered a charge to be sounded, and a signal to be made for engaging an enemy. But no enemy of course, appeared. His soldiers were then di- rected to gather cockle-shells, to be sent to Rome as " spoils of the ocean," and these adorned the ridiculous triumph which a corrupt senate decreed for him. 40 After a siege of ten years, ancient Troy was taken b.y the Greeks, through strategy. Finding they could not gain a forcible entrance into the 234 Notes. city, they constructed an enormous wooden horse, introduced many armed men into its body, and then made a pretended retreat toward the sea- shore, leaving the colossal beast near the walls. Sinon, one of the Greek warriors, went to Troy with his hands bound behind him, and solemnly assured the Trojans of the absolute abandonment of the siege by the Greeks. He then advised them to convey the great horse into the city, as a trophy. It was done, and during that night, Sinon opened the secret door in the side of the horse, and let out the armed Greeks. They sur- prised the Trojans, pillaged the city, and Troy fell! 41 Colonel Leslie was one of the most useful of the British officers who came to America to " crush the rebellion." He arose to the rank of brigadier, whilst here, and was the last commander-in-chief of the British army at Charleston. His services at the south, under Cornwallis, were very highly commended, and he was generally esteemed by the Americans as a judicious, honorable, and hu- mane commander. 42 Marblehead was originally a part of Salem, and is about sixteen miles from Boston. It was remarkable for its fishermen at the time of the Revolution. Colonel Glover of the Continental Army, was from that town, and he employed many seamen from that place in conveying the Americans across the East river in the retreat of Notes. 235 the army from Brooklyn to New York in Septem- ber, 1776. They also transported American stores in boats, from New York to Dobbs' Ferry. 43 See Homer's description of the battle of the frogs and mice. 44 On Sunday, the 26th of February, 1775, Colonel Leslie, with about three hundred men, was sent by Gage to seize some brass cannons and gun-carriages in possession of the Americans at Salem. They proceeded very secretly in a trans- port, which was moored at Marblehead before any of the soldiers appeared. They then rushed ashore, and commenced their march through the town. The people were engaged in public wor- ship. Leslie's intentions being suspected, intelli- gence was immediately sent to Colonel Timothy Pickering, who called out the minute-men, and at an opened drawbridge near Salem, he confronted the British. A parley ensued, and Leslie agreed that if the people would close the bridge, and let him pass over in due form of invasion, he would immedi- ately return. The terms of the treaty were complied with, and Leslie, like a sensible man, returned to Boston. Had he possessed the folly of some of the British officers, he would have given to Salem the honor which now belongs to Lexington, of having been the scene of the first bloodshed in the Revolution. As it was, the news went to Eng- land that in Salem " the Americans had hoisted the standard of liberty." z-$6 Notes. 45 Concord is a few miles from Lexington. There the stores were concealed, which Gage sought to capture or destro} r , when he sent out the detach- ment that was checked by the minute-men at Lex- ington. 46 General Ga^re, in his letter to Governor Trum- bull concerning the affair at Lexington and Con- cord, pretended that his object in attempting to seize the stores and munitions of war at the latter place, was " to prevent civil war," by taking dan- gerous weapons out of the hands of the people ! 47 The important question after blood had flowed was, Which party began the war ? A great many- depositions were taken, and it was fully proven that the British troops first fired on the minute- men at Lexington, and killed several. The fire was promptly returned, however, in self-defence. Tn reference to this question, a writer in Ander- son's Constitutional Gazette, published in New York in 1775, thus states the matter : " The Quarrel with America fairly stated. " Rudely forced to drink tea, Massachusetts in anger Spills the tea on John Bull — John falls on to bang her ; Massachusetts, enraged, calls her neighbors to aid, And give Master John a severe bastinade. Xow, good men of the law ! pray, who is in fault, The one who began, or resents the assault ? " 4s In former wars in America, the term Egular was applied to the British troops which came from Notes. 237 England, to distinguish them from the provincials, or new levies in America. 49 This refers to the distance the British had to retreat after the affair at Lexington. 59 In his account of the skirmishes, General Gao-c was pleased to saj, " Too much praise cannot be given to Lord Percy for his remarkable activity throughout the whole day." 51 This is explained in Note 3, Canto I. 52 Gage endeavored to make light of the fact that he was so hemmed in by the Americans, who had gathered by thousands around Boston ; and in his last proclamation, issued before the battle on Breed's Hill, he said, " With a preposterous parade of military arrangements, they affect to hold the army besieged." 53 The Mystic river is on the northeast side of the Peninsula of Charlestowc, on which are Bun- ker's and Breed's hills. 04 In a late edition, the two following lines were added after the third line above this reference number : " Nay, stem with rage, grins Putnam, boiling, Plunder'd both Hogg and Noddle Island." These were two islands in Boston Harbor, from which the Americans carried off all the cattle, sheep and swine, to prevent their falling into the hands of the British. Gage really had no alter- native but to flee, or be driven "headlong to the sea." 238 Notes. Howe, who succeeded him in command, was re- duced to the same alternative, and in March, 1776, he fled in his ships to Halifax, and the Americans, after a siege of several months, took possession of Boston. The British had been completely hemmed in upon the Boston peninsula from the 19th of April, 1775, until the 17th of March, 1776. Whenever they attempted to penetrate the country, or take possession of any of the islands in the har- bor, they were met with determined resistance. 55 Matthew viii., 32. 56 The British man-of-war, Cerberus, arrived at Boston on the 25th of May, 1775, with Generals Howe, Clinton, and Burgoyne, three officers expe- rienced in the military tactics of Europe, but unfit, in many respects, to conduct the war then just commenced. General William Howe was com- missioned commander-in-chief, in place of General Gage, who was recalled and went to England soon afterward. 57 Popular belief ascribed very evil effects to comets, and they were generally regarded as omens of calamity. 58 Abijah White was a member of the Massachu- setts House of Representatives, from Marshfield, and a warm adherent of the crown. He possessed very little judgment or discretion, and made him- self very ridiculous by the way in which he mani- fested his zeal. When the loyalists of Marshfield, in public meeting, adopted resolutions which ccn- Notes. 239 sured the people of Boston for destroying the tea, he was employed to carry them to that city, and lay them before the governor. Pretending a fear of being robbed of them by the way, he armed himself with gun, pistol and cutlass, and, mounting his horse, appeared like another Hudibras. On arriving at Boston, he caused the momentous docu- ment to be published. This act drew upon him some of the wrath, but more of the ridicule of the whigs, and he disappeared from public life forever. 59 It is related as a fact, that some British offi- cers, soon after G-age^ arrival in Boston, while .walking on Beacon hill one night, were much alarmed by noises in the air resembling the whiz- zing of bullets. They supposed they were missiles from noiseless air-guns, in the hands of the " rebels," and they fled precipitately to their quar- ters. They gave terrible accounts of this " nefa- rious business " in their letters to friends at home. The supposed bullets were the common beetles, with which we are all made familiar in the warm summer evenings. 60 British officials, from ministers of state down to subalterns of lowest grade, were fond of threat- ening the Whigs with the pillory, whipping-post and gibbet. During the war, a son of Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia, was at school at St. Bees, in England. A gentleman one day asked the tutor, " "What boy is this ? " "A son of Richard Henry Lee, of America," he replied. The gentle- 24O »N T E S . man put his hand on the boy's head and remarked, " We shall yet see your father's head upon Tower Hill." The hoy promptly replied, " You may have it when you can get it." That boy was the late Ludwell Lee, Esq., of Virginia. 61 Called also " Heave«offering." Grain and fruit were waved or heaved toward the four cardi- nal points. It was a special present to the priests. See Numbers, chapter xviii. 02 Cropping off portions of the ears, tying men to posts and whipping them, and confining them in a standing position in wooden frames called pillo- ries, were barbarous modes of punishment, for light, offences, at that time. 63 Bunyan, in his Pilgrim's Progress, represents Christian as setting forth upon his journey with a very heavy bundle of all his sins, original and ac- tual, upon his back. e4 See Note 38, Canto II. The uniform alluded to was that of tar and feathers. The want of uniform dress in the American Army was a con stant theme of ridicule with the British at the be- ginning of the war. Mr. Kidder, in his history of New Ipswich, gives, from the lips of "an old soldier, a graphic description of his company when it joined the army of Gates a little while before the capture of Burgoyne. They all wore small clothes, and " not a pair of boots graced the company." Their coats and waistcoats were as various in colors " as the barks of oak, sumach, and other Notes. 241 trees of our hills and swamps could make them/' Their arms were as various as their costume ; one had a heavy " Queen Anne" musket, that had ' done service" in the conquest of Canada, and by his side would be a boy, carrying a little Spanish fuzec, captured, perhaps, at Havana. They all used powder-horns instead of cartridge-boxes, and occasionally a bayonet might be seen. A country blacksmith made the swords of many of the offi- cers, and in every particular they were as uncouth as could well be imagined. 65 The ships that " ravaged our coasts " were not so benign as those of whom Waller sung : "Where'er our navy spreads her canvass wings, Honor to thee and peace to all she brings." 06 Phoebus was another name for Apollo, or the Sun. 67 While the British occupied Boston, they sent out military detachments to the neighboring islands to seize sheep and cattle. Many skirmishes with the Americans ensued on these occasions. And while the army occupied New York, these expeditions were very common, and sometimes resulted in con- siderable bloodshed. The Americans, also, had frequent occasions to send out foraging parties dur- ing the war. It was one of these occasions in which General Wayne was concerned, in New Jer- sey, opposite New York, that gave a theme to Ma- jor Andre when he wrote the famous poem called 11 242 Notes. " The Cow Chase." It was during a foraging ex- pedition of the British from Charleston, up the Combahee river, in South Carolina, that the last battle of the Revolution was fought, in which Col. John Laurens was killed. 68 Charlestown was burned during the battle on Breed's Hill, June 17th, 1775.. Falmouth (now Portland, in Maine) was soon afterward destroyed by fire ; and on the first of January, 1776, Nor- folk, in Virginia, was also consumed, by order of Lord Bunmore. Later in the war, Danbury, Fair- field, and Norwalk were laid in ashes, and attempts were made to destroy other places. At Fairfield, the brutal Hessians, to whom Try on gave full lib- erty to ravage and destroy, excited by strong drink, cruelly treated the women who fell into their hands, and whole families were driven into the swamps for shelter against their infernal lusts. Elsewhere, at the North and at the South, this kind of cruel warfare was frequently carried on by British hirelings, assisted by the Tories, who were justly more hated by the people than the Royal troops, or their German fellow mercenaries. 69 Admiral Graves first appears in the drama of the Revolution, as Commander of the British fleet at Boston, in 1775. He last appeared in the con- test in a sea-fight off the Capes of Virginia, a short time before the surrender of Cornwallis, in 1781, which was the concluding great military event of the war. Notes. 243 70 Sir James Wallace, a fussy, blustering, naval commander, bad charge of a little fleet of small vessels, in Narraganset Bay, to watch the move- ments of the Americans, plunder Rhode Island of sheep and cattle for the benefit of the British army in Boston, and to annoy the Americans gen- erally. And he did annoy the people very much, and sometimes distressed them very much. When he first sailed into the harbor of Newport, he dispatched a letter, in the following words, to Cap- tain Abraham Whipple, of Providence, who, in 1772, commanded an expedition which burned the Gaspe schooner, in Narraganset Bay : " You, Abraham Whipple, on the 17th of June, 1772, burned His Majesty's vessel, the Gaspe, and I will hang you at the yard-arm. James Wallace." Whipple immediately replied : " To Sir James Wallace: Sir : Always catch a man before you hang him. Abraham Whipple." Wallace was driven out of Narraganset Bay in the spring of 1776, and in the autumn of 1777, he went up the Hudson river and assisted in burning Kingston. 71 The Sandemanians were a small religious sect, so named because Robert Sandeman, a native of Perth, Scotland, was the founder. Their leading tenet of belief was that " Faith is a mere intellec- tual belief, a bare belief of the bare truth." They 244 Notes. also believed the Millennium near, and fixed upon the year 1793 as the time for its dawning. San- deman came to America in 1764, and organized a church or society in Boston, and also in Danbury, Connecticut. He died and was buried at the lat- ter place, in 1771, at the age of 53 years. His remains rest a few feet from those of General Da- vid Wooster. 72 The unjust system of depriving whole fami- lies of property because of the political sins of the fathers, was commenced against the adherents of the Crown, first in Massachusetts in 1778, when a vast amount of property belonging to refugees who had fled, and some who ventured to remain, was confiscated. In 1779 the Massachusetts Le- gislature passed a conspiracy act, which sent into perpetual banishment a large portion of the same persons. 13 The Tory party in New England worked upon the fears of the credulous and superstitious, by re- lating wonderful stories of strange appearances in the heavens, and strange noises in the air and un- der ground, and called them warnings of great troubles, if the Whigs persisted in their iniqui- tous proceedings. A remarkable meteor and Aurora Borealis were observed at the commence- ment of the war, and the superstitious were greatly alarmed. 74 " The stars in their courses fought against Sisera." Song of Dehor ah. Judges v. 20. Notes. 245 75 A play upon the name of Lord North, the Prime Minister. 70 Referring to a scheme proposed by Hutchin- son and Oliver, in their letters to the British Min- istry. See Note 98, Canto I. When the Caro- linas were first settled, Shaftsbury and Locke pro- posed a magnificent scheme of aristocratic govern- ment in that portion of the New World, known as the Fundamental Constitutions. It contem- plated orders of nobility, and all the parapherna- lia of aristocracy except a King and Court. Even at that early day the people would not listen to such schemes, and they were abandoned. 77 We have already noticed Hutchinson and Oliver. John Vassal, of Cambridge, was an Ad- dresser of Hutchinson, in 1774, and the next year he was driven from his house by a mob, and made his abode in Boston. Without waiting for Confiscation Laws, the Committee of Safety ap- propriated some of his property to the public use. Such appropriation consisted chiefly of the pro- ducts of the land, then in the fields. When Wash- ington arrived at Cambridge, he made Mr. Vas- sal's house his head-quarters. It is now owned and occupied by Professor Longfellow, the eminent poet. Mr. Vassal went to England, with his family. His property was confiscated in 1778. At the age of sixty years, he died in England. The Vassals were among the earliest and most respectable of the settlers in New England. 246 Notes. 78 These were the titles of James, the brother of Charles the Second, who afterward became King of England. The province of New Netherland was given to him by his brother, and when, by actual conquest, he came into possession of it, the name of the city of New Amsterdam was changed to New York, and that of the town of Fort Orange, near the head of navigation on the Hudson river, to Albany. 79 James Jauncy was at first inclined to be a whig, and was an associate with Jay and others on the Committee of Correspondence of Fifty. He was a member of the New York Assembly in 1775, and was one of the fourteen of that body who addressed General Gage on " the unhappy contest." He held the office of Master of the Rolls under the Crown; and his property was confis- cated. After the war, he applied to the legisla- ture of New York for a restoration of his pro- perty. 80 Samuel Gales was also one of the fourteen Addressers of Gage, who were members of the New York Assembly in 1775. 81 Colonel Christopher Billop was a man of pro- perty and influence. His house is yet (1857) standing on Staten Island, opposite Perth Amboy. It was there that Lord Howe held a conference with a committee of CoDgress on the subject of peace, in 1776. Colonel Billop was another mem- ber of the New York Assembly, who addressed Notes. 247 General Gage. He afterward commanded a corps of Loyalists, was made a prisoner, and was con- fined in New Brunswick (New Jersey) jail, where lie was very harshly treated in retaliation of his cruelties to two American prisoners in his custody. After the war he went to the province of New Brunswick, where he became a prominent man. He died there in 1827, at the age of ninety years. 82 See notice of Crean Brush, in Note 70, Canto I. 83 See notice of Isaac Wilkins, D. D. Note 72, Canto I. 84 Frederick Phillipse, of the Phillipse Manor, in Westchester County, New York, is here alluded to. He was the brother of Mary Phillipse, whose hand was once sought by George Washington, when he was a provincial Colonel. Phillipse was a member of the New York Assembly, and a colo- nel of militia; and finally, on account of his op- position to the whigs, he felt compelled to leave his home and take refuge under British protection in New York. From thence he went to England. His large property was confiscated, and the British Government afterwards allowed him, in compen- sation, about three hundred thousand dollars. Colonel Phillipse died in England. 83 This was Dr. Myles Cooper, already referred to in Note 59, Canto I. He was a noted punster. 85 John Vardell was educated at King's (now Co- lumbia) College. He there prepared for the minis- try, and became a professor in that institution for 248 Notes. a while. He went to England in 1774, to re- ceive orders ; and after the death of Dr. Ogilvie, he was appointed to the rectorship of Trinity Church, in New York, He did not accept it, being, as is supposed, in the employment of Govern- ment. Before he left for England, he had written several poetical satires on the Sons of Liberty, and was quite noted as a political writer in prose and verse. S7 Two High Church clergymen of New York, already noticed. 88 In note 9, Canto II, we have referred to the materials of which the old peerage of England was created. Adam was " created " of the dust of the ground. So the English technical phrase of " creating " a peer seems to be very appropriate, when we turn back to that old peerage, for surely it was of " low degree." 89 See Note 47, Canto II, concerning the re- sponsibility of striking the first blow. 90 These are the Alleghany Mountains, which extend from the State of New York to that of Georgia. They were then on the western frontier of the English settlements in America. 91 The province of Georgia had not joined the union when the first Canto (of which this is a part) of McFingal was written. Georgia was rep- resented in the next Congress, however. 92 See Note 29, Canto II. 93 Demosthenes pursued a course of very severe Notes. 249 self training, so as to excel in oratory. In order to acquire for his voice a mastery over greater sounds, he used to stand upon the sea-shore, in storms, and declaim amidst the roar of the waves. By this means he was enabled to make his words heard and heeded in the tumult of a great as- sembly. 94 See Note 25, Canto I. 95 At that time, and until a quite recent period, the pulpits in this country were covered by a canopy called a " sounding board," to assist in making the preacher's voice heard by the whole congregation. Drawings of such pulpits may be seen in Lossing's Pictorial Field-Booh of the Revolution, vol. i. p. 254, and vol. ii. p. 215. 95 The Parcse or Fates of ancient mythology were Glotho the spinster, who spins the thread of our existence ; Lachesis, the allotter of our des- tinies ; and Atropos, the unchangeable, whoso shears clip the thread when life's mission is ful- filled. 97 The Furiae of mythology were Alecto, the un- ceasing ; Megcera, the envier or denier ; and Ti- sijphone, the blood-avenger. 98 See ^Esop's Fables. 89 Genesis, Chapter xi. 100 On some day in the week previous to the ad- ministration of the sacrament of the Lord's Sup- per in the New England Churches, a sermon was preached which was called a lecture, and that IP 250 Notes. day was known as lecture-day. These lectures were generally very thinly attended ; a fact here alluded to by the poet. CANTO III. 1 See Note 103, Canto I. 2 See Gulliver's Travels, by Dean Swift, The Erobdignagians are represented as a race of giants. s " His spear, to equal which the tallest pine Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast Of some great Admiral, were but a wand." Milton's Paradise Lost, Book I. 4 At an early period of the contest, after the close of the session of the first Continental Con- gress in the autumn of 1774, the Americans used a flag with thirteen stripes, alternate red and white, to signify union. The stars on a blue ground were not used until late in 1777. Congress adopted the following resolution on the 14th of June of that year : " That the flag of the thirteen United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the Union be thirteen stars, white, in a blue field, representing a new constellation." This Canto was written at the close of the con- test. Notes. 251 6 A mixed liquor, consisting of beer and spirits, sweetened, and warmed by thrusting a hot iron into it. 6 A female, celebrated by the ancient poets as skilled in ma Notes. and yet, for his victory on that occasion, he was knighted and became Sir William Howe. He re- mained in Philadelphia after he had captured it in the autumn of 1777, for many months, with a well-provisioned and well-furnished army, while the half-starved, half-clad, and feeble force of the Americans were shivering and famishing at Valley Forge, only twenty miles distant. Yet he made no attempt at what might have been an easy cap- ture of the whole. His idle army in the city be- came greatly weakened by inactivity and dissipa- tion. Dr. Franklin justly observed, " Howe has not taken Philadelphia; Philadelphia has taken Howe." The acute Colonel Hamilton, young as he was, said to General Washington, when that officer was regretting his failure in capturing Howe, — " For my part I am glad of it, for Great Britain might have sent a more active man in his place." 99 The Continental Congress held its session at York, Pennsylvania, while the British held posses- sion of Philadelphia during the winter and spring of 1778. In May, after being honored by a re- markable fete called Mischianza, in the prepara- tion of which the unfortunate Major Andre was the principal actor, General Howe resigned the command of the army to Sir Henry Clinton and returned to England. He was severely censured by Burgoyne and other military men, and some spicy correspondence, statements, &c, ensued. Notes. 301 Howe was a good-natured, full-fed, heavy, indolent man — " the most indolent of mortals," according to General Charles Lee, who averred that he " never took pains to examine the merits or de- merits of the cause in which he was engaged." Howe published a narrative of his campaigns in America, the style of which partakes largely of the sluggishness of his character. He died in 1814. 100 This was Sir Henry Clinton. He was grand- son of Francis, sixth Earl of Lincoln, and was Knight of the Bath. He came to America just before the Battle of Bunker Hill, and remained until near the close of the war. Clinton was quite an active officer, yet not a very skilful one. Soon after his return home, he published a narrative of his campaigns in 1781-83, which Lord Cornwallis, another of the British commanders here, thought it necessary to answer. To this Clinton made a reply. Clinton was Governor of Gibraltar in 1795, and the same year he was elected a member of parliament. He died the following year. 101 Soon after taking command of the British army in America, Sir Henry Clinton was in- formed that a powerful French fleet, under the Count D'Estaing, was on its way, and would prob- ably block up and perhaps capture the British ves- sels in the Delaware under the command of Earl Howe, and thus secure New York. He immedi- ately resolved to evacuate Philadelphia and the 302 Notes. Delaware, and hasten with army and fleet to New York. "With eleven thousand men and an im- mense baggage and provision train he started for New York, by way of New Brunswick. "Wash- ington, at Valley Forge, was on the alert, and commenced a pursuit of Clinton with a more than equal force. By the adroit movement of detach- ments, he compelled Clinton to change his course in the direction of Sandy Hook. 102 Clinton was sore pressed by his pursuers, and the New Jersey militia greatly annoyed him on the flanks. Finally he was obliged to halt at Monmouth Court-House, (now Freehold, New Jersey,) change front, and engage in a general battle with the Americans. The enn-ao-einent com- menced quite early on Sunday morning, the 28th day of June, 1778. It was one of the hottest days ever experienced in that latitude. All day the conflict raged, and night only put an end to it. Both parties slept on their arms, the Americans, under Washington, intending to renew the battle in the morning. Clinton chose rather to avoid that necessity, and at midnight he silently resumed his march, undiscovered by the wearied and sleeping Americans. 103 In his official dispatch to Lord George Ger- main, Clinton wrote : " Having reposed the troops until ten at night, to avoid the excessive heat of the day, I took advantage of the moonlight to re- join General Knyphausen, [the commander of the Notes. 303 Hessians,] who had advanced to Nut Swamp, near Middletown." This dispatch caused a great deal of merriment in America, 4>r it was known that the event took place at about the time of new moon. Poor WilVs Almanac, printed by Joseph Cruikshank, in Philadelphia, indicates the occur- rence of new moon, on the 24th of June, and be- ing four days old on the night of the battle, it set at fifty-five minutes past ten. Clinton had waited for its setting in order to "Steal off on tiptoe in the dark." 104 In his retreat, Clinton placed Knyphausen and his Germans in the rear. In fact during the whole time of service of the German troops in America, they were always used as shields to the British, and were made to perform those services in which honorable soldiers would not willingly consent to be engaged. 105 The poet's allusion here, to the remarkable event recorded in the tenth chapter of the Book of Joshua, is very pertinent, and is elucidated by note 103. 106 This refers to the treaty of friendship and alliance, formed between the struggling colonies and France, on the 6th of February, 1778. The Bourbon king of France had been secretly aiding the revolted colonies, by supplies of arms, ammu- nition, and money, ever since 1776, but unwilling to have an untimely rupture with Great Britain, 304 Notes. all the transactions were so conducted as to have a commercial aspect in private hands. But when the success of the Americans appeared certain after they had, unaided, captured the powerful army of Burgoyne, the French king saw that he might then inflict a severe blow upon his old enemy, England, by acknowledging the independence of the colonies, and by forming an alliance with them. That measure was soon accomplished, and the in- telligence that, on account of that alliance, France had sent a powerful fleet to America, caused, as we have seen (note 101), the evacuation of Phila- delphia and the Delaware by the British land and naval forces. 10T Pursuant toythe terms of the treaty of al- liance with France, the Count D'Estaing sailed from Toulon with a powerful fleet in April, 1778, and arrived off the Capes of the Delaware in July following. The British fleet had escaped to the safe anchorage within Sandy Hook, where the heavy French vessels could not reach them. After block- ading Howe's fleet there for a short time, D'Estaing sailed eastward, to aid the Americans in rescuing Rhode Island from the British. Off Newport, in August, D'Estaing and a fleet under Howe, which had followed him from New York, attempted to fight, but a terrible gale dispersed both fleets, and damaged them badly. 108 In 1779, D'Estaing was sent to the West Indies with a powerful fleet, captured St. Vincent Notes. 305 and Grenada from the English, defeated Admiral Biron in a naval engagement, and made prizes of a British ship-of-the-line, and several frigates, on the southern coast of the United States. He also assisted in the siege of Savannah, in the autumn of that year ; but, pretending to fear the effect of the autumn storms upon his fleet, he abandoned the siege ■when victory was almost in the grasp of the allies, and went to sea, 109 Charles Henry, Count D'Estaing, was a na- tive of Auvergne, France. He was a famous sol- dier in the French service in the East Indies in 1756, was made prisoner by the English, broke his parole and escaped. He commanded an ex- pedition against Grenada, He became a member of the Assembly of Notables in the French Revo- lution, and, being suspected of unfriendliness toward the Terrorists, he was guillotined in April, 1793. 110 Francis Joseph Paul, Count De Grasse, was a native of France, and born in 1723. He was an active naval officer in the West .Indies, before coming upon the American coast, and afterward performed signal service in assisting in the cap- ture of Cornwallis and his army at Yorktown in October, 1781. He formed an alliance with an unworthy woman after his return to France, whose conduct embittered his life. He died early in 1788, at the age of sixty-five years. 111 The life and services of the Marquis De La 306 Notes. Fayette, are too well known to every American reader, to need any special notice here. 112 General Lincoln was second in command of the army under Gates, at the capture of Burgoyne. He was appointed to succeed General Robert Howe in command of the southern army, in 1779 ; and in the spring of 1780, having been ordered by Congress to defend Charleston, the capital of South Carolina, at all hazards, he collected what force he could there, and sustained a siege, conducted by Sir Henry Clinton, Lord Cornwallis, and Admiral Arbuthnot, for several weeks. He was at leDgth compelled to yield, and on the 12th of May surrendered his army and the city to the victorious enemy. 113 After the capture of Charleston, the British officers displayed an activity hitherto unknown to them, and Clinton left Cornwallis to take energetic measures for a complete subjugation of the whole South. Cornwallis himself marched up the Santec toward Camden ; another detachment under Colo- nel Cruger took possession of Fort Ninety-six in the south-western part of South Carolina, and another, under Lieutenant-colonel Brown, who, like Cruger, was an American Loyalist, took possession of Augusta, in Georgia. For a while, these two States were completely crushed beneath the heel of British power. 114 This refers to the partisan corps under Sum- ter, Morgan, Marion, Pickens, Clark, Buford, Notes. 307 and other bold leaders, but especially to the van- quished army of Gates mentioned in the next note. 115 General Gates was sent to the South after the fall of Charleston, to rally the patriots and reclaim Georgia and South Carolina. He went with proud confidence of success, and in a night and early morning engagement with Cornwallis, near Camden, he was signally defeated, his whole army was dispersed, and he was compelled to be- come a flying fugitive with only a handful of at- tendants. General Charles Lee, (then in disgrace because of bad conduct at Monmouth,) who knew Gates well, said to him, on his departure, " Take care that you do not exchange your Northern laurels for Southern willows." To this the poet alludes. 116 After the defeat of Gates, Cornwallis pressed forward into North Carolina, took post at Hills- borough, and really held military sway, even to the borders of Virginia, which, also, he included in his programme of conquest. 117 This is in allusion to Arnold's marauding ex- peditions in Virginia. He sent off several cargoes of negroes and tobacco (the fruits of his plunder) to the West Indies, and sold them for his own profit. 118 Admiral Lord Rodney, having been unsuc- cessful in attempting to recapture St. Vincent from the French, in 1781, sailed for the Dutch 308 Notes. island of St. Eustatius, where there was au im- mense amount of goods, belonging to people of several nations, neutrals as well as belligerents, because it was a free island. The Governor had not heard of the commencement of hostilities be- tween Great Britain and Holland, and being un- prepared, made no defence. The value of the capture was immense. Two hundred and fifty vessels, some with rich cargoes, were taken, and goods valued at three millions of pounds sterling were seized. This capture of property belonging to subjects of neutral nations, and the general seizure and sale of private as well as public pro- perty for the benefit of the captors, was truly an insult to the laws of nations. 119 In allusion to Tryon's marauding expeditions already referred to. 120 After the defeat of Gates near Camden, in August, 1780, General Nathaniel Greene was ap- pointed to the command of the Southern army. He soon gathered a considerable force, took post at Cheraw on the east, and on the Broad River on the west, and prepared to reclaim the Carolinas. He was, however, compelled to flee before Corn- wallis to Virginia, early in 1781. Greene re- mained in Virginia only long enough to refresh his troops and receive recruits, when he again entered North Carolina. The decisive battle at Guilford Court-House, in which Cornwallis was victor, so far as maintaining the field was con- Notes. 309 cerned, occurred in March. " Another such vic- tory," said Charles Fox in the House of Commons, " will ruin the British army." It was disastrous to Cornwallis, and he hastened with the remains of his army to Wilmington, near the seaboard, and then pushed forward into Virginia, where Benedict Arnold, the traitor, was marauding. 121 During the spring and summer of 1781, Greene swept every vestige of British power from the interior of the Carolinas, and drove the enemy toward the coast. Outposts, forts, encampments, depots, all were captured or broken up, and the lost South was almost completely regained. When, in October, Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, the British in South Carolina were confined to Charleston, and those in Georgia were hemmed within the narrow limits of Savannah and its im- mediate vicinity. 192 After in vain attempting to overrun and sub- due Virginia, Cornwallis, close pressed by La Fayette, Wayne and Steuben, slowly retired sea- ward ; and, pursuant to orders from General Clin- ton, to be prepared to come to his aid at New York, if necessary, he crossed the James River and took post at Portsmouth, opposite Norfolk. Disliking that situation, he entered the Chesapeake Bay, and going up York River, commenced forti- fying the village of York, and Gloucester Point, opposite. There he constructed heavy fortifications, and seemed to defy the power of the Americans. 310 Notes. 123 Wh^ General Clinton heard of the march of the allied armies southward, he sent Admiral Graves to assist Cornwallis. But the Count De Grasse, who had just arrived with his fleet from the ^Yest Indies, was already in Lynn Haven Bay, within the capes, and Graves could not enter York River. After the two fleets had a slight combat just outside the mouth of the Chesapeake, Graves withdrew. 104 Count Rochambeau, the commander-in-chief of the French army in America, joined Washing- ton on the Hudson, a few miles above New York, in the summer of 1781. After deceiving Clinton into the belief that they intended to attack him in New York, the allied armies made rapid marches southward, at the suggestion of La Fayette, who was watching Cornwallis there. They arrived at "Williamsburgh, a few miles from Yorktown, twelve thousand strong, on the 28th of September, and made immediate preparations to attack the invader. 125 After the capture of Burgoyne at Saratoga, m 1777, to Burgoyne an army, was a favorite ex- pression in America, when alluding to a total and complete capture. 126 According to Ovid, in his Metamorphoses, Cadmus, the founder of Grecian Thebes, wish- ing to sacrifice to the gods a cow which he had followed to the spot, by command of the Delphic Oracle, he sent to a fountain for water. It was Notes. 311 guarded by a serpent, which he afterwards killed. By direction of Minerva, he sowed its teeth, and instantly a crop of armed men started up from the ground, five of whom assisted him in building Thebes. 127 Fnding his fortifications to be gradually crumbling under the terrible blows of the allied besiegers, Cornwallis sought shelter for himself and army, by flight. He determined to cross the York river, break through the French troops on the other side, and make forced marches toward New York. Just as a part of his troops were embarked a sudden tempest arose, and they were driven back. Cornwallis was foiled, and saw no alternative but surrender or destruction. 128 Yorktown stands upon a high bluff of rock marl, making the shore of the York river, very precipitous. At the foot of this bank Cornwallis had an excavation made, in which, secure from the rage of battle above, he held councils with his officers. That excavation has now disappeared, but another made since, was shown to visitors, at a shilling a-piece, as the identical one, when the writer visited Yorktown a few years ago. 129 Driven to extremities, and despairing of aid from General Clinton, Cornwallis offered to nego- tiate for a surrender of his whole army. It was done, and in the presence of a vast concourse of people assembled from the country, and before the allied armies, the sword of ' Cornwallis was 312 Notes. delivered by General O'Hara to General Lincoln, and the whole array laid down their arms, on the 19th of October, 1781. The shipping in the river — every thing — became spoils of victory. The whole number of persons surrendered, was a little more than seven thousand. 130 rjpk e "Virginia Loyalists, and those who had accompanied Cornwallis from North Carolina. 131 Edicts issued by the popes were called Bulls, from the seal {bulla) attached to them. These seals were made of metals and wax. The cele- brated " golden bull " of the Emperor Charles the Fourth, was so called because the seal was made of gold. 132 The British commanders, and especially Cornwallis, had proclaimed full protection to the Loyalists, on all occasions. There were about fifteen hundred Tories with Cornwallis at York- town. All the favor he asked for them, on his surrender, was that a vessel might be provided to carry away the most obnoxious, who were afraid to meet the resentment of the Whigs. 133 Genesis, Chapter iv. is* " From his horrid hair, Shakes pestilence and war." Milton. 135 We have before alluded to the often re- peated assurances in British proclamations, that Notes. 313 the " door of mercy is now open," and " the door of mercy will be shut." The poet seemed to fear that the hinge of that door so constantly swinging, might be quite worn out. 136 The genius of America was generally repre- sented as a native female, in the scant costume of the aborigines, and head dressed with the long plumage of the eagle and other birds. Such a figure may be seen on the colonial pendant seals. " Tories dressed in plumes," is an allusion to their being tarred and feathered. 137 Referring to the American flag. 138 In allusion to Lord Mansfield's favorite dis- position of culprits, by transporting them into exile in some colony of Great Britain. 139 King George the Third, and Lord North, his prime minister. 140 In law, a writ to restrain a person from going out of the kingdom, without the king's per- mission. 141 The description of Continental paper money, which here follows, is one of the finest examples of the sublime burlesque to be found in our language, especially when all its allusions are made plain by the light of history. 142 The crutches called " Regulation " and " Ten- der," by which the specter was supported, were the acts of the State legislatures, in their attempts to prevent the depreciation of the Continental money, and to maintain its credit. Some of those acts 14 314 Notes. were for the regulation of the prices of commodi- ties, and the others were to make that paper a lawful tender, in payment for goods, or debts. 143 On all the emissions of Continental Bills, there was printed the pledge of Congress for their punctual redemption, in the words, " The Faith of the United States." 144 See Note 62, Canto IV. 145 On the 22d of June, 1775, the Continental Congress resolved to issue bills of credit, or paper money, to pay the current expenses of the war. This was called Continental money. These bills were issued soon afterward, and new emissions were authorized from time to time, until the ago-re- ' CO gate sum put forth represented two hundred mil- lions of dollars. Within a little more than two years after their emission, they began to depreciate in value, because the pledge, printed upon each bill, that Congress would pay gold and silver for them, could not be redeemed. In 1780, forty paper dollars were worth only one in specie ; and so rapid was the depreciation, that at the close of 1781, they were worthless. They had performed a temporary public good, but produced much in- convenience, and even suffering, to individuals. To the worthlessness of this currency the poet al- ludes in speaking of the " Ghost of Continental money." 146 Brazil in South America, is one of the chief sources from whence diamonds have been pro- Notes. 315 cured in modern times. The allusion to Peruvian wealth, refers to the rich gold and silver mines — the richest then known in the world — discovered by the Spanish conquerors of Peru, as well as the im- mense amount of precious metals found in the temples, and in the palaces of the Incas or rulers of that country. 147 Danas was the daughter of a king of Argos, who on consulting an oracle, was told that she would bear a son who would deprive the king of his life. To prevent this, the king shut her up in a brazen tower, with her nurse. Jupiter had seen and loved the maiden ; and under the form of a golden shower, he poured through the roof, into her bosom. She became the mother of Per- seus, by Jupiter, and the young man killed his grandfather, by accident. . 14S One of the most ruinous speculations of modern times, was the conception of John Law of Edinburgh, who, by remarkable shrewdness in financial schemes, became comptroller-general of the treasury of France. He proposed three schemes — a bank, an East India Company, and a Mississippi Land and Trading Company. The French ministry became enamored with his plans in 1710, and in 1716 Law opened a bank in his own name, under the Regent of France. Most of the people of property, and of all ranks, pur- chased shares in his bank and his companies, with the expectation of immense profits. His was de- 316 Notes. clared a royal bank in 1718. The shares rapidly appreciated in value — upwards of twenty-fold that of the original — and in 1719, they were worth eighty times the amount of all the current specie in France. That great fabric of false credit fell to the ground the following year, and almost pros- trated the French government in its fall. Tens of thousands of families were utterly ruined. 149 It is a singular fact that a scheme of specu- lation similar to that of Law's in France, had birth in England the same year (1710), and ex- ploded the same year (1720). A company was incorporated in 1716, under the name of the South Sea Company. The affair promised im- mense gains to the stockholders, and the shares, originally £100, raised to the enormous price of £1000 ! As in France, almost every person of wealth in Great Britain, became stockjobbers and speculators in the fatal scheme. The airy fabric fell in 1720, and ruined thousands of families. The estates of the directors, valued at £2,014,000, were seized in 1721. Mr. Knight, the cashier, absconded with £100,000, but compounded for £10,000, and returned. The success of Law's scheme in France, was the origin of the similar scheme in England. The papers and pamphlets of the time, contained many squibs during the pre- valence of the mania, and after the bubble burst, caricatures in abundance appeared, in ridicule of the whole thing. " Bubble-Cards " were used Notes. 317 by players, all bearing some appropriate verse, give one as a fair specimen : "A lady pawns her jewels by her maid, And in declining stock presumes to trade, Till in South Sea at length she drowns her coin, And now in Bristol stones glad is to shine." 150 The infancy of modern chemistry, assumed the charlatan form of Alchemy, or the pretence of transmuting baser metals into gold. It was pre- tended that a certain powder, known to chemists, would convert base metals into gold ; and many men have wasted their lives in attempts to dis- cover this philosopher's stone, as that powder was called. At about 1782, Dr. Price, of Guilford, England, professed to have made the discovery, and carried specimens of his gold to the king, af- firming that it was made by means of a red and white powder. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society, and was required, on pain of expulsion, to repeat his experiments before a committee of that body. After some equivocation, he committed suicide by the use of poison, in 1783. The Phi- losopher's stone may be ranked with Perpetual motion, the Inextinguishable lamp, the Quadra- ture of the circle, and other impossibilities, which have puzzled and deranged the brains of other- wise sensible men. 151 The name of Midas appears among the earli- est mythological legends of the Greeks, as king 318 Notes. of a district in Thrace. One legend (to which our poet here refers), represents Midas as having on one occasion excited the gratitude of Bacchus, who desired him to ask any favor he pleased. Midas requested that whatever he touched might be turned to gold. It was granted. The myth doubtless illustrates the historical fact of an an- cient Phrygian prince, who became very wealthy by mines and by commercial operations. 152 The Continental money, as here indicated, performed a vast amount of public good, during the first years of the war, notwithstanding its de- preciation, as we have said, fell heavily upon the great mass of the people. It carried on the finan- cial operations of the war ; and weak and faithless as it afterwards proved, it was the very sinews of strength in providing means for opposing the su- perior power of Great Britain, in the conflict. 153 j n orc ] er to facilitate the depreciation of Continental paper money, and thus weaken this arm of patriotic resistance, vast quantities of counterfeit Continental bills were printed, and sent into the country from New York and Long Island. In Game's New York Mercury, April 14th, 1777, appeared the following significant ad- vertisement : " Persons going into other colonies may be supplied with any number of counterfeited Congress notes, for the price of the paper per ream. They are so neatly and exactly executed, that there is no risk in getting them off, being almost Notes. 319 impossible to discover that they are not genuine. This has been proven by bills to a very large amount which have already been successfully cir- culated. Inquire of Q. E. D. at the coffee-house, from 11 A. M. to 5 P. M. during the present month." These counterfeits were sent into the country by cart-loads. Such was one of the dis- honorable modes of warfare, employed by the British commanders here. The younger Pitt, when prime minister of England, caused a large number of French assignats to be forged at Bir- mingham, to depreciate the currency of the French republic. Napoleon also caused forged notes of the Austrian Bank to be distributed throughout the Austrian Tyrol. 154 Exodus, Chapter viii , verse 17. 155 Portions of the shores of Great Britain are remarkable for cliffs of chalk, which may be seen at a great distance. For this reason, Caesar gave it the name of Albion. 6 The common penalty for felony in England, was transportation to the colonies, and many left their country for their country's good. The idea of transporting the whole Island, was a grand am- plification in the mind of the poet. 157 The superficial area of Lake Erie is greater than that of England ; while Lake Superior, the largest body of fresh water in the world, is twenty-two hundred miles in circumference. Eng- land might be placed in its centre, and its people 320 Notes. could hardly spy the main from its shores. This couplet, however, drew down upon the head of the author very severe rebuke from the British press in after years. The poem was first published complete in America in 1782. Some years after- ward it was reprinted in London. In the mean- while Lord North, who was always near-sighted, had lost his sight entirely, and the critics unfairly imagined that these two lines were intended as a cruel insult. In a subsequent edition, the name of the king was inserted in place of that of North. A few years afterward, the king also was afflicted with blindness. So, to later readers, the unfortunate poet still appeared cruel. 153 This refers to the confederacy of the Northern European powers against England, commenced in 1780 by the Empress Catharine, of Russia. The ostensible object was to protect the rights of neu- trals in time of war — the real object was to crip- ple the maritime power of England. Catharine issued her proclamation in February. In the course of the summer, Prussia, Denmark, and Sweden, became parties to the policy declared by the Czarina, namely, that no port should be con- sidered blockaded, unless there was sufficient force present to maintain a blockade. In November the States-G-eneral of Holland joined the con- federacy. France and Spain also acquiesced in the new maritime code, and a general Continental war against England appeared inevitable. This was Notes. 321 * called the Armed Neutrality. The scheme failed, however, because of a want of confidence in the faithfulness of the Empress. 159 This was not uttered in a spirit of prophecy, yet how prophetic were the words, let current his- tory testify. Freneau, another poet of the Kevo- lution, seemed equally prophetic in his Rising Glory of America, written in 1775. He says : " I see, I see Freedom's established reign ; cities and men, Numerous as sands upon the ocean's shore, And empires rising where the sun descends ! The Ohio soon shall glide by many a town Of note ; and where the Mississippi stream, By forests shaded, now runs weeping on, Nations shall grow, and states not less in fame Than Greece and Rome of old ! " 160 We can never sufficiently lament this sudden termination of the Vision, for it might have ex- tended far down the ages beyond our present experi- ence, and revealed future realities which have not yet become elements of our dreams. 161 " either tropic now, 'Gan thunder." Milton's Paradise Regained. 16-2 The poet here uses a common phrase with the British officers during the war. Every officer who luckily escaped capture or destruction, de- scribed his retreat as having " been under the very nose of the enemy." 163 In allusion to the fact that all obnoxious 14* 322 Notes. • New England Tories, when the places of their abode became too hot for them, hastened to Boston, and placed themselves under the protection of the British. M'Fingal, for his loyalty, and for his courage when out of the presence of danger, was as highly deserving of that protection, as his great needs, at that perilous moment, could claim. 164 Genesis, Chapter xix. 165 After the Americans had promulgated then- Declaration of Independence, the ministerial speakers in parliament, and writers in favor of the government, amused themselves by calling it, " The Phantom of Independence." The news- papers echoed the simile, and it was a favorite idea until it assumed a shape so substantial, in the progress of the war, as to make the word ridiculous. 166 The hegira of M'Fingal, was a memorable epoch in the computation of the Loyalists. Epic poetry has scarcely a parallel in giving the grand catastrophe — the denouement of the story. We would gladly tell the reader more of the life of the hero — his sufferings in exile — his promotion in office — his safe denunciations of democracy »" under the very nose " of monarchy — but the re- spectful silence of the poet puts an injunction of secrecy upon the pen of the Annotator. r J o. ^ ■r Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date: Sept. 2009 PreservationTechnologies A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 111 Thomson Park Drive Cranberry Township, PA 16066 (724)779-2111