Samantha at Saratoga by Marietta Holley (e book reader pc .TXT) š
- Author: Marietta Holley
Book online Ā«Samantha at Saratoga by Marietta Holley (e book reader pc .TXT) šĀ». Author Marietta Holley
āLINES WROTE ON A OLD WOMAN; OR,
STANZAS ON A ACKORDEUN.
āOh mournful sounds that riseth through the air,
Not very far, but far enough to hear.
We fain would say to thee forbear, forbear!
As we adown the road, our pathway steer.
āOh! had thy voice not been so low and thin
It would have been more high, and loud and deepā
And thine Ackordeun, oh could it, could it win,
A glorious voice of soul, methinks Iād weepā
āWith joy. But now I weep not, nay, nor fain
Would set me down beneath thy song-tree blest;
More fain I would relate, it giveth me pain
To list the strains, and listening lo! I sigh for rest, sweet rest.
āFor ah! no nightingale art thou, nor lark,
Nor thrush, nor any other bird, afar or nigh
Thy instrument hath not the thunder shock
That calleth nationās wildly, wet or dry.
āA lesson thou mightest learn oh! female sweet!
If thou no voice hast got, soar not in song,
Much noise the lonely aching ear doth greet,
That maketh sad, and ātis a fearful wrong.
āA fearful wrong to pound pianos with a fiendish will
Misuse them far above their feeble power to bear,
Ah! could pianos cower down, and lo! be still,
āTwould calm the savage breast, and smooth the brow of care.ā
A TRIP TO SCHUYLERVILLE.
It wuz a lovely morninā when my companion and me sot out to visit Schuylerville to see the monument that is stood up there in honor of the Battle of Saratoga, one of 7 great decisive battles of the world.
Wall, the cars rolled on peacefully, though screechinā occasionally, for, as the poet says, āIt is their nater to,ā and rolled us away from Saratoga. And at first there wuznāt nothinā particularly insperinā in the looks of the landscape, or ruther woodscape. It wuz mostly woods and rather hombly woods too, kinder flat lookinā. But pretty soon the scenery became beautiful and impressive. The rollinā hills rolled down and up in great billowy masses of green and pale blue, accordinā as they wuz fur or near, and we went by shininā water, and a glowinā landscape, and pretty houses, and fields of grain and corn, etc., etc. And anon we reached a place where āVictory Millsā wuz printed up high, in big letters. When Josiah see this, he sez, āHaint that neighborly and friendly in Victory to come over here and put up a mill? That shows, Samantha,ā sez he, āthat the old hardness of the Revolution is entirely done away with.ā
He wuz jest full of Revolutionary thoughts that morninā, Josiah Allen wuz. And so wuz I too, but my strength of mind is such, that I reined āem in and didnāt let āem run away with me. And I told him that it didnāt mean that. Sez I, āThe Widder Albert wouldnāt come over here and go to millinā, she nor none of her family.ā
āBut,ā sez he, āthe name must mean sunthinā. Do you sāpose it is where folks get the victory over things? If it is, Iād give a dollar bill to get a grist ground out here, and,ā sez he, in a sort of a coaxinā tone, āleās stop and get some victory, Samantha.ā
And I told him, that I guessed when he got a victory over the world, the flesh, or theāDavid, he would have to work for it, he wouldnāt get it ground out for him. But anon, he cast his eyes on sunthinā else and so forgot to muse on this any further. It wuz a fair seen.
Anon, a big manufactory, as big as the hull side of Jonesville almost, loomed up by the side of us. And anon, the fair, the beautiful country spread itself out before our vision. While fur, fur away the pale blue mountains peeked up over the green ones, to see if they too could see the monument riz up to our National Liberty. It belonged to them, jest as much as to the hill it wuz a standinā on, it belongs to the hull liberty-lovinā world.
Wall, the cars stopped in a pretty little village, a clean, pleasant little place as I ever see, or want to see. And Josiah and me wended our way up the broad roomy street, up to where the monument seemed to sort a beegon to us to come. And when we got up to it; we see it wuz a sight, a sight to behold.
The curius thing onāt wuz, it kep a growinā bigger and bigger all the time we wuz approachinā it, till, as we stood at its base, it seemed to tower up into the very skies.
There wuz some flights of stun steps a leadinā up to some doors in the side onāt. And we went inside onāt after we had gin a good look at the outside. But it took us some time to get through gazinā at the outside onāt.
Way up over our heads wuz some sort a recesses, some like the recess in my spare bed-room, only higher and narrower, and kinder nobler lookinā. And standinā up in the first one, a lookinā stiddy through storm and shine at the North star, stood General Gates, bigger than life considerable, but none too big; for his deeds and the deeds of all of our old 4 fathers stand out now and seem a good deal bigger than life. Yes, take āem in all their consequences, a sight bigger.
Wall, there he stands, a leaninā on his sword. Heāll be ready when the enemy comes, no danger but what he will.
On the east side, is General Schuyler a horsback, ready to dash forward against the foe, impetuous, ardent, gallant. But oh! the perils and dangers that obstruct his pathway; thick underbrush and high, tall trees stand up round him that he seemināly canāt get through.
But his gallant soldiers are a helpinā him onward, they are a cuttinā down the trees soās he can get through āem and dash at the enemy. You see as you look on him that he will get through it all. No envy, nor detraction, nor jealousy, no such low underbrush full of crawlinā reptiles, nor no high solid trees, no danger of any sort can keep him back. His big brave, generous heart is sot on helpinā his country, heāll do it.
On the south side, is the saddest sight that a patriotic American can see. On a plain slab stun, lookinā a good deal like a permanent grave-stun, sot up high there, for Americans to weep over forever, bitter tears of shames, is the name, āArnold.ā
He wuz a brave soldier; his name ort to be there; it is all right to have it there and jest where it is, on a gravestun. All through the centuries it will stand there, a name carved by the hand of cupidity, selfishness, and treachery.
On the west side, General Morgan is standinā up with his hands over his eyes; lookinā away into the sunset. He looked jest like that when he wuz a lookinā after prowlinā red skins and red coats; when the sun wuz under dark clouds, and the day wuz dark 100 years ago.
But now, all he has to do is to stand up there and look off into the glowinā heavens, a watchinā the golden light of the sun of Liberty a rollinā on westward. He holds his hand over his eyes; its rays most blind him, he is most lost a thinkinā how fur, how fur them rays are a spreadinā, and a glowinā,way, way off, Morgan is a lookinā onto our future, and it dazzles him. Its rays stretch off into other lands; they strike dark places; they burn! they glow! they shine! they light up the world!
Hold up your head, brave old General, and your loyal steadfast eyes. You helped to strike that light. Its radience half-frights you. It is so heavenly bright, its rays, may well dazzle you. Brown old soldiers, I love to think of you always a standinā up there, lifted high up by a grateful Nation, a lookinā off over all the world, a lookinā off towards the glowinā west, toward our glorious future.
On the inside too, it wuz a noble seen. After you rose up the steps and went inside, you found yourself in a middlinā big room all surrounded by figures in what they called Alto Relief, or sunthinā to that effect. I donāt know what Alto they meant. I donāt know nobody by that name, nor I donāt know how they relieved him. But I sāpose Alto when he wuz there wuz relieved to think that the figures wuz all so noble and impressive. Mebby he had been afraid they wouldnāt suit him and the nation. But they did, they must have. He must have been hard to suit, Alto must, if he wuznāt relieved, and pleased with these.
On one side wuz George the 3d of England, in his magnificent palace, all dressed up in velvet and lace, surrounded by his slick drestup nobles, and all of āem a sittinā there soft and warm, in the lap of Luxury, a makinā laws to bind the strugglinā colonies.
And right acrost from that, wuz a picture of them Colonists, cold and hungry, a havinā a Rally for Freedom, and a settinā up a Town meetin! right amongst the trees, and under-brush that hedged āem all in and tripped āem up at every step; and savages a hidinā behind the trees, and fears of old England, and dread of a hazerdous unknown future, a hantinā and cloudinā every glimpse of sky that came down on āem through the trees. But they looked earnest and good, them old 4 fathers did, and the Town meetinā looked determined, and firm principled as ever a Town meetinā looked on the face of the earth.
Then there wuz some of the women of the court, fine ladies, all silk, and ribbons, and embroideries, and paint, and powder, a leaninā back in their cushioned arm-chairs, a wantinā to have the colonies taxed still further soās to have more money to buy lace with and artificial flowers. And right acrost from āem wuz some of our old 4 mothers, in a rude, log hut, not strong enough to keep out the cold, or the Injuns.
One wuz a cardinā wools, one of āem wuz a spinninā āem, a tryinā to make clothes to cover the starved, half-naked old 4 fathers who wuz a tramplinā round in the snow with bare feet and shiverinā lims. And one of āem had a gun in her hand. She had smuggled the children all in behind her and she wuz a lookinā out for the foe. These wimmen hadnāt no ribbons on, no, fur from it.
And then there wuz General Schuyler a fellinā trees to obstruct the march of the British army. And Miss Schuyler a settinā fire to a field of wheat rather than have it help the enemy of her country. Brave old 4 mother, worthy pardner of a grand man, she wuz a takinā her life in her hand and a destroyinā her own property for the sake of the cause she loved. A emblem of the way men and women sot fire to their own hopes, their own happiness, and burnt āem up on the altar of the land we love.
And there wuz some British wimmen a follerinā their husbands through the perils of danger and death, likely old 4 mothers they wuz, and thought jest as much of their pardners as I do of my Josiah. I could see that plain. And could see it a shininā still plainer in another one of the picturesāLady Aukland a goinā over the Hudson in a little canoe with the waves a dashinā up high round her, to get to the sick bed of her companion. The white flag of truce wuz a wavinā over her head and in her heart wuz a shininā the clear white light of a womanās deathless devotion. Oh! there wuz likely wimmen amongst the British, I haint a doubt of it, and men too.
And then we clim a long flight of stairs and we see some more pictures, all round that room. Alto relieved agin, or he must have been relieved, and happified to see āem, they wuz so impressive. I myself had from 25 to 30 emotions a minute while I stood a lookinā at emābig lofty emotions too.
There waz Jennie McCrea a beinā dragged offen her horse, and killed by savages. A dreadful sightāa woman settinā out light-hearted toward happiness and goinā to meet a fearful doom. Dreadful sight that has come down through the centuries, and happens over and over agin amongst female wimmen. But here it wuz fearful
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