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HE boom of guns was on the air ; The strong Colonial heart was stirred ; From North to South, From East to West, From mouth to mouth, From breast to breast, Was passed the inexorable word That spake a people's last despair Of England's justice. Everywhere Brave souls grew braver : — " Let us free This land for which we crossed the sea, And make it ours. Revolt may be The tyrant's name for Liberty ! " — So flashed the grand electric thought Through all the Old Thirteen ; so wrought The current mounting high and higher, Till eyes were all ablaze with fire CENTENNIAL POEM. That makes men heroes — waiting for The first dread reveille of war. And ere that April day was done, Was fired the shot whose startling sound Went echoing all the world around — The battle-shot of Lexington ! II. By yonder stream whose quiet flow Glides onward toward the silvery James, More than one hundred years ago, Were gathered men whose stalwart frames Defied the winter's frost and snow. Not as the gallant Spotswood's knights, With blare of trump and roll of drum, And floating pennon did they come, To climb yon Blue-Ridge heights. What cared such strong-souled men as they, For knighthood's bauble of a day ? — High-purposed men, to whose keen view The order of " The Golden Shoe " Seemed but the Governor's toy ! Their eyes Were stern with thoughts of such emprise CENTENNIAL POEM. As conquered forests, clothed the hills With harvests, reared the whirring mills By every stream ; they nursed a scorn For the gloved softness of the Court, Where guarded hands disdained the hard Grasp of the axe, and found their sport In tennis-court and tilting-yard ; They made the valleys laugh with corn, And purpled with the royal grass, The meadows, edged with fringing rills, And opened up the mountain pass : Strong men of mould, Like vikings old, Who dared to die, by field and flood, — Upon their dinted shields, no crests, No golden Orders on their breasts, But — iron in their blood ! III. So, not to Spotswood's gay and martial band, Were these beholden for their land Of Eschol richness. They had felt Their way along its streams and vales, 3 CENTENNIAL POEM. And bosky dales ; And through its length and breadth had knelt At log-hewn altars, offering there The grateful incense of their constant prayer. IV. These were the men — McDowells, Lyles, The Alexanders of " The Isles," McLaughlins, Grahams, Campbells, Reids, Moores, Stuarts — men of doughty deeds ; Of true blue blood as ever wet The veins of a Plantagenet ! Here, where to-day we stand, that day they stood, With axe and shovel, chain and rod, Prepared to stake the virgin sod ; And when they paused, and asked what name Should crown their clearing in the wood : — "They bowed as men would bow in prayer, For still that echo stung the air, And warned them of the strife begun : — What but the now heroic one That kindled every heart to flame ? What word but — Lexington ! CENTENNIAL POEM. Baptized in blood — named in the name Triune — a godhead, one, the same — Religion, Learning, Freedom — here They chose the spot on which to rear Humanities more purely true Than Grecian porches knew ; Philosophy and Art, Nobler than ancient sages could impart ; Wisdom beyond what Attic scrolls supply, That taught men how to live, and how to die ! VI. Upon the timbered ridge that lay Across the billowy hills away, There sprang a lowly Academe, So rude, that no enthusiast's dream Could have foreshown the fame it rears, Beneath its century's weight of years ; A spring beneath an oak, That falling leaves might choke ; But destined so to broaden far and wide, That on its bosom argosies might ride ! CENTENNIAL POEM. How arrogant the name bestowed By Graham in his zeal — " The Hall Of Liberty " * ! — when over all The land, oppression scored its trace, Leaving its lines on every face — On every heart its load. A name prophetic still ! Since from this classic hill, Such hero-thoughts and words and deeds have flowed, As make it what to-day we see — To old traditions true, with welcome free, And doors wide-set — The Hall of Liberty ! VII. Pure fame ! True name ! — When Tarleton flung His angry and contemptuous taunt Against the Valley, did it daunt The cleric Captain f in that hour Of onset ? Did his spirit cower Beneath it ? Nay ! When proud and clear, * Afterwards Washington College. fThe Rev. Wm. Graham, first Rector of Liberty Hall and Captain of the Liberty Hall Company. 6 CENTENNIAL POEM. His Chieftain's summons reached his ear — " Up ! Men of West Augusta ! " quickly down Each ardent scholar flung his books and gown, Snatched up his musket, girt his sword, And rushed to drive the British horde Beyond the Piedmont. VIII. When the day Of triumph came, and war's surcease Made room for holy arts of peace, Our Cincinnatus nobly laid The proffered wealth he would not claim,* Down at " The Hall," whose well-won name Had reached him 'neath Mount Vernon's shade, And stirred his heart : Not yet, not yet, Could he forget His " Men of West Augusta ! " IX. Turn and see " The Ruins " yonder, lichened with decay, f * Washington endowed " Liberty Hall" with a large grant voted to him by the Legislature of Virginia. f The old stone College destroyed by fire in 1803. CENTENNIAL POEM. Where dreaming students stray, Recalling visions of the elder day. The log-hewn " Hall " has grown to be Collegian in its state ; the one Foremost and first of all to bear The name that since has filled the air ; That stirs the world's heart to its core, As never name had done before ; The name that swells the Poet's song ; That makes humanity sublime ; That teaches patriots to be strong; That heads the warrior-list of time ; Repeated since ten thousand ways, Which yet no speech of every day's Most common use can rob of praise ; — That name which, like the sun, Loses no light by all it rests upon ; Which glorifies with gorgeous alpen-glow Mont Blanc's stark summits of eternal snow ; Yet gilds the crocus blossoming below : —The Name of Washington ! CENTENNIAL POEM. X. I Not from the ilex groves where Sophocles Chanted his strophes grand, Not from the slopes where silvery olive trees Flung shadows o'er the land ; Not from the garden seats where Plato taught, Not from the Bema's height, Did the young Greek look on a landscape fraught With such a rare delight. 3 Behind yon isolated mountain crest, Draped in the filmy fold Of trailing clouds whose splendor hung the west With broidery-work of gold, 4 The musing scholar watched the sun go down, Bequeathing near and far, With sovran hand, to every peak a crown Translucent as a star. CENTENNIAL POEM. 5- He looked from off the classic page, all flushed With mists of Attic rills ; And saw Virginia's loveliest valley hushed In her embracing hills. 6. What serried corn ! What fields of amber grain ! What haunted homes were there ! — Not Arcady, with Pan and all his train Was ever half so fair ! XL Shades of the Past ! we see you file With pensive step and serious face, Each to his own appointed place Within the Academic aisle. Wise Alexander's look of peace Turned heavenward ; Crittenden whose name Lights up Kentucky's roll of fame ; Majestic Baxter ; witty Speece ; Calm Ruffner with his wondrous lore ; McDowell robed in courtly grace ; CENTENNIAL POEM. Floyd with his marble-featured face ; The Southern Preston who could sway Senates that thrilled before a Clay ; Grave Plumer with his golden store Of Saint Chrysostom eloquence ; Judicious Brown in word and deed, The Hooker of the Church's need ; And many a sage and statesman more, Went from these haunted precincts hence, Whose names the bead-roll bore.* XII. Peace needs no history : Year by year, The placid seasons came and went ; And in their Happy Valley here, Its dwellers drank, with thankful cheer, The wine of sweet content. They saw with pride the pillared range Surmount the hill-crest yonder— saw The reign of order, peace, and law Prevail within its honored walls, Without a crave or care for change. * Distinguished graduates. CENTENNIAL POEM. The yearly stream of graduates passed, And took their place, well-trained and true, To do the work that men should do, Earnest and faithful to the last, — In legislative halls ; In pulpits where the people hung Entranced on many a silvery tongue ; In courts where truth and right prevail, And Justice holds the level scale ; In chambers where a gracious art Avails to stay the laboring breath, And snatch the throb that stirs the heart Out of the grasp of death. Love trained them in its sweetest lore ; And Idyls for themselves they made In many a lilac shade, Chanting them to rapt listeners o'er and o'er ; Idyls yet fonder than Theocrites Piped to Sicilians breeze. Pale students did not ask, In that unworn and younger day, CENTENNIAL POEM. To have the edge of their appointed task By such attrition worn away, As ball and hop and " German " furnish, when The temples ache with intellectual pain ; Or as the evening drive, with two-in-hand, Beside the fairest lady of the land, Can bring the over-wrought and throbbing brain ! Enough for them the quiet walk ; The interchange of book and flower ; The passing of a moon-lit hour Meshed by a maiden's tender talk ; The music of the practised tunes That hallowed Sunday afternoons ; The pathos of the going away ; The blush that sealed engagements made Beneath the locust's shade, For next Commencement Day ! •x- # •* # *■ * O days of innocence, forever o'er, Who sighs to think ye can return no more ! XIV. But clouds at length began to dim The country's broad horizon rim ; 13 CENTENNIAL POEM. Dissensions rose on every hand, And strained to breaking, the strong strand Of Brotherhood : And through and through, By doubts our fathers never knew, The Nation's inmost soul was wrung. Fierce taunts from North to South were flung ; Fanatic meddlers dared to thrust The pikes they forged in fires of hate, With crazy strivings to adjust The fine machinery of state. And when their rankling injuries stung The South to madness, what availed To guard the sacred rights assailed ? And when the fatal fiat sprung War on Virginia's borders — when No choice remained for dauntless men, What else was left to do or say, But draw the sword, and Yea or Nay, Fling, in hot wrath, the sheath away ! xv. That April morn of 'Sixty-one Broke sad and ominous ; for the roar 14 CENTENNIAL POEM. That belched from Sumpter's baleful gun, Echoed from mountain-top to shore, — The desperate deed was done ! Then came the startling, stern command : — " Close up your College doors ! Disband Your classes once again, and go, Like Graham's youths, to meet a foe Stronger than Tarleton's. Seize your guns, And prove yourselves the patriot sons Of patriot sires ! " XVI. Who can forget With what a fierce and fiery bound Of heart, they came, when Nelson wound * War's first alarum ? How they met With ready step and fervent will His summons to the daily drill, — These beardless heroes ! even yet We seem to hear their measured tread As on they marched, with lifted head, Leaving all eyes behind them wet. * Prof. Nelson, first Captain of the College Company. 15 CENTENNIAL POEM. Brothers in arms, they felt the thrill, When the hot rider came, who bore • The order to yon martial hill — " Send forward Jackson and the Corps I " And when to their first field of fight, Upon Manassas' summer plain They marched beneath the bullets' rain, Following the dauntless step of White,* — What worthier names were 'midst the slain ? What veterans poured a richer flood, And deeper wrote their names in blood ? XVII. Draw close the veil ! Be dumb ! Let the young martyrs go Down the memorial years, With solemn step and slow ; Nor count the fields of death, Where, with a courage strong, As only to the noblest souls belong, They yielded up their breath. * Prof. White, Captain of the College Company at the first Battle of Manassas. CENTENNIAL POEM. Smiles all too proud for woe Have flashed across our tears, A grand aerial bow That spans and circles o'er Their names for evermore ! XVIII. Why, then, nurse to life the pain Of those bitter years again ? Why awake the mournful knell Of despair that rang abroad, When the brave young Captain fell,* Mid the crash of shot and shell, Slain upon his native sod? Or the gallant Pendleton, f Sank when later fields were won ? XIX. i Ah ! when with arms reversed, And shrouded flags, the men * Captain Hugh W. White, who fell at the head of the College Company, at the second Battle of Manassas. f Lieut. Col. A. S. Pendleton, of Stonewall Jackson's Staff. CENTENNIAL POEM. Who followed him the first, Bore the dead Hero to his home again — 2 The Hero who could thrill With voice and flash of eye Broken battalions till, With shout and cheer, they rushed straight on to die — 3 How could we bear it ? — how Crush down with strange control, Despairs whose memory now, Can even send a shudder through the soul ? 4 Ah ! Glory, Honor, Fame ! Ye had no power to stay The gulfing griefs that came To wreck our hopes, that ghastly morn in May ! * XX. Hush the drum ! Stop the blare ! * May 15, 1863, the day of General Jackson's burial. 18 CENTENNIAL POEM. Let the beat Of sad feet Cease their tramp along the street : Let the tolling bell be dumb, Drive these sounds of fear Even from Memory's ear ; Lest our lost and wept for come With a vision of storm and wrack, Bringing all our heart-break back ! •x- * * * * * Thank God ! that time has brought us healing balm ! Thank God ! for blessed anodynes of calm ! XXI. The fratricidal strife at last Wore to its close : our dream was past ; Spiked was the last Confederate gun ; And Might the day had won. Our great Commander's pitying soul, Yielding to Fate's supreme control, Forebore, within the chasm of strife To cast another Curtius life, And bravely owned the dread eclipse J 9 CENTENNIAL POEM. That darkened sky and sun. Then war-worn veterans weeping heard As sad, magnanimous a word As ever left a warrior's lips : — * -x- * " Men ! I have done my best for y oa And you for me ! Our fallen Cause Demands that you be strong- and true, — Demands that you maintain the laws : I 've done my very best for you / " * ■* * — His " best " / — How grand it was ! XXII. With hopes destroyed, with ties all riven. With wife and children, exiles driven, With not another home than Heaven, — What did our Chieftain ? From his hand Drop his untarnished sword, and stand In dark despair and sullen pride, Within the land he would have died So gladly for ? Nay ! never he ! To do, and dare, and die, when need Demanded, this were brave indeed : For State and Country still CENTENNIAL POEM. To live, and bow submissive to God's will,- Only such lofty chivalry Became the name of Lee ! He knew misfortune's harsh control Howe'er it bowed, could never break The mettled spirit that could stake Its all on Duty, — never take' True manhood from a human soul ! He listened not to lures of ease That offered homes across the seas : What charm had visions such as these For him, whose oath was sworn to share All ills his State was doomed to bear ? XXIII. — " Come lead us in the paths of peace, As once in war, since war must cease ; And teach us how We too may bow ; And from sown dragon-teeth may raise A phalanx armed for bloodless fight, To crush the wrong — maintain the right — The Sparti of our future days ! " CENTENNIAL POEM. XXIV. With grand humility he came, And found his calm Mount Vernon here, While the world's paeans crowned his name With praise he did not turn to hear. And never in the proudest hour Of war's embattled pomp and power, Did he so rule all hearts, and sway Their reverence as none other can — The noblest, courtliest gentleman — The knightliest knight who wore the Gray ! XXV. Ye saw him take with matchless grace The academic seat, and wear Its humble honors, with such rare Majestic skill, as if the place Were broad enough to meet the large demands Of his imperial hands ! Ye watched him as his silvered head Bowed meekly at the morning prayer ; And marvelled, as with martial tread, That brooked no swerve to left or right, 22 CENTENNIAL POEM. His bands of students firm he led As legions to the fight ! Ye saw him in his peaceful rest ; Ye saw him in the evening's wane, When unobscured by mist or stain, His cloudless orb went down the west. * * *• ■* * # * * * Ah ! — scarce we dare beneath our breath, To name him here — so pure, so brave ! Tread softly ! for the Sculptor's skill Holds him in seeming slumber still : Hush ! — for that stirless sleep is death, — Peace ! — for we stand too near his grave ! XXVI. Oh ! ye who tread these classic halls, Baptized once more in patriot blood, — Think what exalted memories flood These doubly consecrated walls ! The hoary lore of Oxford's towers, Made sacred by her Alfred's name, Can never boast a prouder fame Than shrines these simple aisles of ours ! * Valentine's recumbent figure in the Mausoleum. 23 CENTENNIAL POEM. XXVII. Ye will not walk ignoble ways: Ye dare not seek unworthy aims : Ye cannot do a deed that shames These heroes of our holiest days ! Your oath a Roman oath must be, Sworn with a faith that will not yield- Sworn on the doubly sacred shield Of Washington and Lee ! 1* €