THE RED men came in their pride and wrath, | |
| Deep vengeance fired their eye, | |
| And the blood of the white was in their path, | |
| And the flame from his roof rose high. | |
| |
| Then down from the burning church they tore | 5 |
| The bell of tuneful sound, | |
| And on with their captive train they bore | |
| That wonderful thing to their native shore, | |
| The rude Canadian bound. | |
| |
| But now and then, with a fearful tone, | 10 |
| It struck on their startled ear, | |
| And sad it was, mid the mountains lone, | |
| Or the ruined tempests muttered moan, | |
| That terrible voice to hear. | |
| |
| It seemed like the question that stirs the soul | 15 |
| Of its secret good or ill, | |
| And they quaked as its stern and solemn toll | |
| Re-echoed from rock to hill. | |
| |
| And they started up in their broken dream, | |
| Mid the lonely forest-shade, | 20 |
| And thought that they heard the dying scream, | |
| And saw the blood of slaughter stream | |
| Afresh through the village glade. | |
| |
| Then they sat in council, those chieftains old, | |
| And a mighty pit was made, | 25 |
| Where the lake with its silver waters rolled | |
| They buried that bell neath the verdant mould, | |
| And crossed themselves and prayed. | |
| |
| And there till a stately powow came | |
| It slept in its tomb forgot; | 30 |
| With a mantle of fur, and a brow of flame, | |
| He stood on that burial spot: | |
| |
| They wheeled the dance with its mystic round | |
| At the stormy midnight hour, | |
| And a dead mans hand on his breast he bound, | 35 |
| And invoked, ere he broke that awful ground, | |
| The demons of pride and power. | |
| |
| Then he raised the bell, with a nameless rite, | |
| Which none but himself might tell, | |
| In blanket and bear-skin he bound it tight, | 40 |
| And it journeyed in silence both day and night, | |
| So strong was that magic spell. | |
| |
| It spake no more, till St. Regis tower | |
| In northern skies appeared, | |
| And their legends extol that powows power | 45 |
| Which lulled that knell like the poppy flower, | |
| As conscience now slumbereth a little hour | |
| In the cell of a heart that s seared. | |
| |