Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By The Sicilian VespersJ. G. Whittier
S
With the veil of evening fell,
Till the convent tower sent deeply forth
The chime of its vesper bell.
One moment—and that solemn sound
Fell heavy on the ear;
But a sterner echo pass’d around;
And the boldest shook to hear.
In the torch-light cold and dim;
And the priest let fall his incense-cup,
And the virgin hush’d her hymn;
For a boding clash, and a clanging tramp,
And a summoning voice were heard,
And fretted wall, and tombstone damp,
To the fearful echo stirr’d.
As he sat beside his hearth;
And the song and the dance were hush’d around,
With the fireside tale of mirth.
The chieftain shook in his banner’d hall,
As the sound of fear drew nigh;
And the warder shrank from the castle wall,
As the gleam of spears went by.
At the feast and flow of wine,
In the red array of mailed men,
Or bow’d at the holy shrine;
For the waken’d pride of an injured land
Had burst its iron thrall;
From the plumed chief to the pilgrim band;
Wo!—wo!—to the sons of Gaul!
With the young and passing fair,
And the flame went up from dome and tower;
The avenger’s arm was there!
The stranger priest at the altar stood,
And clasped his beads in prayer,
But the holy shrine grew dim with blood;
The avenger found him there!
To the serf and mailed lord;
They were gather’d darkly, one and all,
To the harvest of the sword;
And the morning sun, with a quiet smile,
Shone out o’er hill and glen,
On ruin’d temple and mouldering pile,
And the ghastly forms of men.
As its early glance came forth;
It had no sympathy with the wild
And terrible things of earth;
And the man of blood that day might read,
In a language freely given,
How ill his dark and midnight deed
Became the calm of heaven.