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Home  »  The Poetical Works In Four Volumes  »  The Crisis

John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892). The Poetical Works in Four Volumes. 1892.

Anti-Slavery Poems

The Crisis

Written on learning the terms of the treaty with Mexico

ACROSS the Stony Mountains, o’er the desert’s drouth and sand,

The circles of our empire touch the western ocean’s strand;

From slumberous Timpanogos, to Gila, wild and free,

Flowing down from Nuevo-Leon to California’s sea;

And from the mountains of the east, to Santa Rosa’s shore,

The eagles of Mexitli shall beat the air no more.

O Vale of Rio Bravo! Let thy simple children weep;

Close watch about their holy fire let maids of Pecos keep;

Let Taos send her cry across Sierra Madre’s pines,

And Santa Barbara toll her bells amidst her corn and vines;

For lo! the pale land-seekers come, with eager eyes of gain,

Wide scattering, like the bison herds on broad Salada’s plain.

Let Sacramento’s herdsmen heed what sound the winds bring down

Of footsteps on the crisping snow, from cold Nevada’s crown!

Full hot and fast the Saxon rides, with rein of travel slack,

And, bending o’er his saddle, leaves the sunrise at his back;

By many a lonely river, and gorge of fir and pine,

On many a wintry hill-top, his nightly camp-fires shine.

O countrymen and brothers! that land of lake and plain,

Of salt wastes alternating with valleys fat with grain;

Of mountains white with winter, looking downward, cold, serene,

On their feet with spring-vines tangled and lapped in softest green;

Swift through whose black volcanic gates, o’er many a sunny vale,

Wind-like the Arapahoe sweeps the bison’s dusty trail!

Great spaces yet untravelled, great lakes whose mystic shores

The Saxon rifle never heard, nor dip of Saxon oars;

Great herds that wander all unwatched, wild steeds that none have tamed,

Strange fish in unknown streams, and birds the Saxon never named;

Deep mines, dark mountain crucibles, where Nature’s chemic powers

Work out the Great Designer’s will; all these ye say are ours!

Forever ours! for good or ill, on us the burden lies;

God’s balance, watched by angels, is hung across the skies.

Shall Justice, Truth, and Freedom turn the poised and trembling scale?

Or shall the Evil triumph, and robber Wrong prevail?

Shall the broad land o’er which our flag in starry splendor waves,

Forego through us its freedom, and bear the tread of slaves?

The day is breaking in the East of which the prophets told,

And brightens up the sky of Time the Christian Age of Gold;

Old Might to Right is yielding, battle blade to clerkly pen,

Earth’s monarchs are her peoples, and her serfs stand up as men;

The isles rejoice together, in a day are nations born,

And the slave walks free in Tunis, and by Stamboul’s Golden Horn!

Is this, O countrymen of mine! a day for us to sow

The soil of new-gained empire with slavery’s seeds of woe?

To feed with our fresh life-blood the Old World’s cast-off crime,

Dropped, like some monstrous early birth, from the tired lap of Time?

To run anew the evil race the old lost nations ran,

And die like them of unbelief of God, and wrong of man?

Great Heaven! Is this our mission? End in this the prayers and tears,

The toil, the strife, the watchings of our younger, better years?

Still as the Old World rolls in light, shall ours in shadow turn,

A beamless Chaos, cursed of God, through outer darkness borne?

Where the far nations looked for light, a blackness in the air?

Where for words of hope they listened, the long wail of despair?

The Crisis presses on us; face to face with us it stands,

With solemn lips of question, like the Sphinx in Egypt’s sands!

This day we fashion Destiny, our web of Fate we spin;

This day for all hereafter choose we holiness or sin;

Even now from starry Gerizim, or Ebal’s cloudy crown,

We call the dews of blessing or the bolts of cursing down!

By all for which the martyrs bore their agony and shame;

By all the warning words of truth with which the prophets came;

By the Future which awaits us; by all the hopes which cast

Their faint and trembling beams across the blackness of the Past;

And by the blessed thought of Him who for Earth’s freedom died,

O my people! O my brothers! let us choose the righteous side.

So shall the Northern pioneer go joyful on his way;

To wed Penobscot’s waters to San Francisco’s bay;

To make the rugged places smooth, and sow the vales with grain;

And bear, with Liberty and Law, the Bible in his train:

The mighty West shall bless the East, and sea shall answer sea,

And mountain unto mountain call, Praise God, for we are free!

1848.