Mapping Indigenous Poetry of North America, 1830-1924

"The Lovers" by George Copway

The sun had set,—the clouds which fringed 
The sky were gorgeously tinged 
With gold, and purple, and all dyes 
Which make the summer sunset skies 
So lovely, and whose rays impart 
To every impulse of the heart 
Such chastened, hallowed thoughts, as are 
Akin to the soft light which there 
Beams forth so beautifully bright, 
Sweet herald of approaching nighte! 
    O'er the calm waters of the bay, 
Where the Ojibway Island lay, 
Those rays are glanced in many a track 
To the bright clouds, which send them back 
Beneath the waters where they glow,
Forming a mimic heaven below.
Oh! that such hallowed scenes as this 
Should ever look on ought but bliss! 
When the fond soul hath felt the power 
Of this enchanting, soothing hour 
To wipe out every stain which care 
Or sin hath left corroding there,—
Oh! why will it again return 
To drink from the polluted urn,
With which guilty pleasures allure 
The bosoms thus, once, rendered pure.

——————————

This lovely scene has passed away, 
And the last tints of dying day 
Are fading from the western skies,—
When MO-NING-WUN-UH, there arise 
Along thy shores a voice's wail, 
Whose accents through thy lovely vale 
All sorrowful and plaintive spreade;—
It is the wailing for the deadd. 
When the light barks, the rest that bore, 
Passed rapidly upon thy shore, 
A maiden band was there to find 
If brother, lover, stayed behind;
And as they found them there, or not,
With joy or grief they left the spot,—
And now when the faint twilight spreads
Its sombre veil above their heads,
The voice of mother, sister, bride, 
Is mingled in the plaintive tide,
For those they may not greet again,
Who sleeps upon the battle plain.
But one was there from whose distressed 
And deeply agitated breast
No wailings flowed;—she could not weep,—
Her agony was all too deep.
ME-ME, fair child of light and love!
Lovely and beautiful above
All earthly power to describe,
In the soft language of her tribe.
She had most fitting]y been styled
The dove, so innocent and mild
The feelings nature had impressed 
Upon her bright and sinless breast.
No thought which did not breathe of Heaven 
Had ever to her heart been given,—
No passion angels might not own 
Had ever in her dark eyes shone,—
But all was hallowed, pure and bright 
As heaven's own celestial light. 
The form that held that soul encased 
So sinless, was the no less graced
With more that the rapt heart ere deemed 
Of bright when it most fondly dreamed. 
She loved with all the power of such, 
To love when tones from others touch 
The chords which with responsive thrill 
Vibrate in their own heart until 
There is no power or faculty 
Within the soul, all joyously 
Which doth not tremble with the weight 
Of feeling which it hath in freight. 
Such was the love, so pure, so deep,
ME-GI-SI from its mystic sleep
Had wakened never more to rest, 
To life within her gentle breast.
 They loved as mortals never should—
 To stake the whole life hath of good 
 Upon one cast, and see that fail,—
 O, the sad tortures which assail 
 The trusting heart! and ME-ME felt
 Hers with this bitter anguish melt, 
 When he whose smiles alone could give 
 All for which she would wish to live, 
 Came not, and as she deemed no more
 Would roam with her their happy shore. 
     There was a sweet secluded spot, 
 A gentle point which slightly shot 
 With sloping bank into the bay, 
 Where often at the close of day, 
 Apart from those whose noisy mirth 
 Had in it all too much of earth 
 For pleasures of that hallowed kind 
 Which love had in their hearts enshrined, 
 She and ME-GI-SI passed the hours 
 In weaving garlands of bright flowers, 
 And circling with Jove's trembling hand
 Around their brows the fragrant band, 
 Or breathing to each other's ear 
 The tender words they loved to hear,—
 He with a deep and noble feel ing
His passion's fervent strength revealing,
While she with less of words perchance,
But with a bright, enraptming glance
From her full eyes responsive turned,
To all that in his own heart burned;
Or leaning fondly on his breast,
She sung the dying day to rest.
    Now, while with melancholy swell
The dirge upon the night air fell,
She sought this spot, and, seated there,
Upon her hands she bowed her fair
And gentle, face, o'er which was spread
The marble paleness of the dead.
Ah! ME-ME! none can ever know
The full extent of that deep woe
Which wrung thy heart, until the hour
When they, like thee, have felt its power
    While thus she sat, a bark appeared, 
And to this spot its swift course steered.
A moment, and its prow was fast
Upon the shore, and from it passed
A tall and noble youth, who went
With gentle steps and slowly bent
In saddened fondness by her side. 
She saw him not; for sorrow's tide 
Had swept across her heart until
 Her senses sank beneath its chill.
 But when her name he fondly spoke, 
 She raised her head— "ME-GI-SI" broke 
 In joyful accents, as she sprung 
 And round his neck in transport clung. 
 The sudJen joy his presence brought 
 Upon her heart so overwrought, 
 Her consciousness fled with the shock,
 And now like ivy to the rock 
 She lay in sweet, unconscious rest, 
 Entwined around her lover's breast. 
 And when at length her eyes unclosed 
 To his, on whose breast she reposed, 
 The look was all so mild and sweet 
 With which those eyes her lover's greet, 
As though their light beamed from a soul
Into which Heaven's sunshine stole. 
"To what a fearful weight of grief 
Beloved, thou hast brought relief!"
Thus she began, "I ask not what 
The reasons why thou earnest not, 
When others of our tribe returned, 
From whom the fearful tale I learned
That thou hadst fall'n beneath the art 
Of one of those of icy heart,—
Once in the power of whose dread spell 
None e'er returned his fate to tell. 
It is enough for my glad heart 
To know that here again thou art,—
That oft in this, our loved retreat, 
With gladsome hearts, we yet may meet,—
To tell o'er and o'er to thee 
How very dear thou art to me,—
And thou to fold me to thy breast, 
And say 'thou art in that love blest.'
O! when we meet at times like this, 
It seems as though the whole of bliss
Which ever in the bright world shone, 
Gathers in my poor heart alone! 
To gaze, in fondness on thy brow, 
And feel thy heart, as I do now, 
Beneath my own so wildly beat,—
To hear thy words so soft and sweet 
Call me, as oft they do, thy bride, 
O! what hath earth to give beside! 
When will the war-cry cease to grieve
My heart, because it bids thee leave; 
While I an hundred times a day 
Come to this lovely spot to pray, 
Until it seems my heart would break 
To the Great Spirit for thy sake. 
Say, must thou yet again expose 
Thy life among those cruel foes, 
The fearful Sioux?—but ah, love! why 
Breaks from thy bosom that deep sigh? 
Has thy heart any care? ah, say, 
And let me kiss that care away," 
She said, and with her fingers fair 
She brushed away the raven hair 
Which o'er his forehead clustering strayed,
 And then upon his brow she laid 
Her gentle lips. ME-GI-SI felt 
His purpose almost in him melt, 
And for a moment he forgot 
His sad, inexorable lot, 
So sweet the thrill that kiss had sent 
Through his sad heart; but when he bent 
His eyes upon her lovely face, 
And saw how deep and pure the trace
 Of trusting love in every look, 
His bosom heaved, and his soul shook 
With the intensity of pain 
Its breaking chords had to sustain, 
As rushing thoughts again impress 
The withering, blighting consciousness 
That he no more upon that smile
Which had such power to beguile, 
Could in the bliss of former days 
Fix his full soul's adoring gaze. 
Alas! he knew the dream was past, 
And this fond look must be his last. 
He knew that should those eyes beam yet 
When he was gone, as wnen they met, 
He could not, must not, from the sight
Receive, as he had done, delight. 
He knew if yet that cheek should wear 
The hallowed smiles which now were there, 
The thrills of rapture they impart 
Must fall upon another's heart.
 If those eyes beam! If that cheek glow! 
 Alas! He doth too sadly know, 
 His prcseneo only can awake
 Those smiles which beam but for his sake,—
That he alone can give the light 
Without which they will sink in night.
'Twas this which gave the deadliest sting 
To all his soul was suffering.
If he alone might meet the blow, 
And his heart only feel tho woe,—
If on his own the blight might rest, 
And leave unscathed her tender breast, 
He could sustain the seathing stroke, 
And firmly meet it like the oak 
Whose trunk lightning indeed might break,
But whose firm roots they could not shake
But that the misery he knew
Should tear her heart asunder, too!—
O! that was torture all too deep; 
He felt these thoughts in tumult sweep 
Across his brain,—and when at length 
 A powerful effort called the strength
Into his prostrate breast again,
And he so far o'ercame its pain
As to, in broken words, relate
The tale he know must seal their fate,
It was with accents so subdued ,
In spi te of all his fortitude,
As though at every word he spoke
A chord within his sad heart broke.—
"Ah! ME-ME, thou hast been and art
The sparkling dew-drop of my heart,
Beneath whoso brightness I have felt
In that of love all feelings melt;—
O, 'twas a glorious dream that stole
So sweetly, pu rely o'er my soul:—
I did not deem that I should wake
To see my heart with that dream break.
But, ME-ME, that bright dream is fled:—
Like the cold fingers of the dead,
I feel its dead joys o'er my breast
In icy suffoc ation pressed.
O, what but thee and this dead spot
Wo uld I not give could I but blot
From memory all that hath passed
Since in this bower we parted last. 
I've struggled, but it is in vain; 
The fire is in my heart and brain, 
And will not cease its torturing strife
Until extinguished with my life. 
Thou knowest the totem I have borne 
Is not such as by thy tribe worn;—
That we, unknowing what its name, 
Have often wondered how it came 
That I alone have worn a crest 
Differing so strangely from the rest. 
'Tis strange no more; the battle-field 
The mystery hath at length revealed, 
And thy fond lover hath his sire 
Among the foe whom thy tribe's ire 
Hath driven from their native land, 
A scattered but unconquered band. 
Yes, ME-ME, I am one of those, 
Thy nation's fiercest, deadliest foes, 
Whom, but a moment since, so truee
Thou didst well term the fearful Sioux. 
Fearful they are, and will be yet, '
To those who shall their path beset.
Thou knowest between this tribe of thine 
And that which henceforth must be mine 
Exists a hatred strong as death,
Resigned not even with their breath. 
Judge, then, if they could e'en abide 
To see the dove the eagle's  bride. 
Alas! l    ME-ME, it may not be, 
And were it not, my love, for thee,
I could rejoice that my firm nerve 
To direful vengeance yet might serve, 
For her whose soft and gentle lays
Were carolled to my infant days, 
But whom the Ojibway beguiled, 
And robbed at once of wife and child;—
And I have sworn my soul to give 
To retribution while I live;—
But short the moments that remain 
Before that vow will be in vain.—
To-morrow's sun will see its beam 
Flashed back in many a war-knife's gleam,
And yonder waters on whose breast 
The moonbeams now so sweetly rest, 
Shall clrink before the day shall close, 
The mingled blood of warring foes. 
And I shall be amidst the strife,—
But not as erst, against the life 
Of sire and kindrdd warrior, no,—
My arm must find more fitting foe. 
Something forewarns me that my blood 
Shall mingle with to-morrow's flood;
I feel it now within my heart,—
To-night, for the last time, we part;
And yonder stars which shine so bright, 
When they oome not another night, 
Will look upon my bleeding form 
No longer with life's pulses warm, 
And that brow, cold, and damp in death, 
So lately hallowed by thy breath. 
But let it come! Why should I live 
When life hath nothing now to give 
But blighted hopes and vain regrets;
And every lingering sun that sets 
Adds only to the bitter store 
With which the heart was charged before. 
Yet O, how happy! were it not 
That this inexorable lot 
Hath interposed its withering blight 
Between my heart and all that's bright,
How happy to observe each day 
Beneath thy sweet smile pass away, 
To feel thy warm breath on my cheek, 
To see thee, love thee, hear thee speak,—
And shield thy tender heart from all 
Which on it might too rudely fall. 
Bright picture of our former days, 
But one on which I must not gaze,—
l've braved both friends' and foemen's power 
For the enjoyment of this hour,—
To bathe my soul once more in light, 
Ere it sink into endless night." 
    He paused, and closer to his breast 
The maiden's form he wildly pressed, 
As if that pressure could keep nndcr 
A heart which else would. burst asunder. 
And there they 8tood, that hapless pair, 
The victim each of mute despair;
Yet how exalted, noble, pure, 
The anguish which their souls endured—
When the full bosom swells like this 
With feelings boundless, fathomless, 
There's something so exalted there, 
That e'en though springing from despair, 
The heart would scarce desire repose 
If purchased at the life of those. 
Sensations vague and undefined 
Had agitated MW-ME's mind 
\Vhen first, ME-GI-SI's words conveyed 
The destiny o'er them weighed,—
But when at length, she knew the worst, 
And the full truth upon her burst, 
A pang shot through her heart and brain, 
But one,—and all was calm again; 
But with that pang had fled all sense 
Of pain or woe forever hence. 
''T'was so intense no other grief 
Could wake a throe, however brief,
And then a holy calmness came, 
Succeeded to the passioned flame, 
Which had so brightly, till that hour,
Maintained within her breast its power.
It was a calmness ,which had birth 
In the conviction that the earth 
With all its pleasure, all its sweet, 
Had nothing which could ever cheat, 
Even for one brief moment's flight, 
The sadness of her bosom's blight. 
All tranquility she raised her head, 
Drooping like lily, o'er its bed, 
And gently loosed her from the clasp
Convulsive of her lover's grasp, 
And spoke with look so calm and mild, 
It might alrrost be said she smilecl, 
But such a smile, as one might trace, 
Upon the cold and marble face 
Of one whose spirit had just riven 
The bonds which checked its flight to heaven.—
" ME-GI-SI, O, how glad would I 
Lay this poor body down to die, 
Could it but bring again to thine 
The joy that can no more be mine. 
Let not thy ME-ME's broken heart 
One sorrow to thine own impart; 
O, no, but go, forget, that we 
Have ever loved so trustfully.—
Thy duty calls, then be it so, 
And let no thought of me e'er throw 
Across thy breast a single cloud 
The sunshine of its peace to shroud. 
What though this fate shall blight my powers 
Like early frosts, the gladsome flowers, 
And my poor body find its rest 
Full soon, upon the earth's cold breast?
My spirit still shall hover near thee, 
And this, its only thought to cheer thee, 
And pour most fondly into thine 
The light which in itself shall shine. 
Yes, go, forget that we have met, 
Or if thou canst not all forget, 
Think of it as a dream which stole
In night's calm hours into thy soul,
Whose memory perchance may cling
Around thy softened heart and fling 
A shade of sadness which you may 
Not altogether dash away, 
But which thou shouldst not let control 
The strength and bravery of thy soul.—
No, if thou canst not banish all, 
And memory will at times recall
The gladsome hours our hearts have known,
Thrilled by each other's look and tone, 
There let thy fond thoughts only dwell\
On this, thy     ME-Me loved thee well, 
And only look on those sweet hours
As thou would'st look on lovely flowers, 
From which the freshness might be fled, 
But which, though withered, yet would shed 
Their fragrance sweet as when their hue
Was heightened by the night's soft dew. 
O! let me deem that thus thy heart 
Will look on mo, and I can part 
With one less pang from all those bright 
And happy dreams which take their flight, 
Till on the far-off spirit-shore 
We meet again to part no more." 
    O, Love! How hallowed, noble, pure,
The feeling which thou secure 
Unto the breast where thou dost deign 
To institute thy perfect reign! 
When touched by thee, how all the dross
Of earthly passions, which so toss 
And heave their billows o'er the soul
Before it hath felt thy control,
By thy strong alchemy expelled. 
Yields up the places it hath held, 
And all that finds acceptance there 
Is hallowed as the breath of prayer,
And ME-ME, though despair's cold breath 
Had sent the icy chill of death 
Over her bosom's tender chords, 
Yet even then her love found words, 
She fondly hoped might interpose 
A power to sooth her lover's woes. 
But vain! The love which thus could make
Such sacrifices, for his sake, 
Had kindled in his heart the same 
Self-sacrificing, generous flame,—
And when his quick sense caught this new 
And last fond proof of love so true, 
And saw and felt himself how much 
The purpose cost which made it such, 
And gazed upon her standing there 
So droopingly and yet so fair, 
It was too much,—he could not brook 
That quiet and heart-stricken look. 
He caught her up and wildly pressed 
The blighted lily to his breast, 
And for a moment yielded all 
His heart and soul to love's fond call, 
Resolved to brave scorn, torture, death, 
To save that gentle heart from seath. 
Fond dreamer, up! away! away! 
Death and dishonor if you stay,—
But death and honor if you go—
Away! to meet your country's foe! 
A moment, and he felt it true,
No word broke forth to say adieu, 
But one long burning kiss he gave 
Upon that brow he could not save,—
Then turned and wildly rushed again, 
With wildred sense and maddened brain,
 To where his light bark floating lay, 
And o'er the waters shot his way. 

This page has paths:

This page has tags: