FOR THE WALLS OF CIUDAD RODRIGO.
HERE Craufurd fell, victorious, in the breach, Leading his countrymen in that assault
Which won from haughty France these rescued walls; And here intomb'd far from his native land
And kindred dust, his honour'd relics rest. Well was he versed in war, in the Orient train'd Beneath Cornwallis; then for many a year Following through arduous and ill-fated fields The Austrian banners; on the sea-like shores Of Plata next, still by malignant stars Pursued; and in that miserable retreat, For which Coruña witness'd on her hills
The pledge of vengeance given. At length he saw, Long woo'd and well deserved, the brighter face Of Fortune, upon Coa's banks vouchsafed, Before Almeida, when Massena found
The fourfold vantage of his numbers foil'd, Before the Briton, and the Portugal, There vindicating first his old renown,
And Craufurd's mind that day presiding there. Again was her auspicious countenance Upon Busaco's holy heights reveal'd; And when by Torres Vedras, Wellington, Wisely secure, defied the boastful French,
With all their power; and when Onoro's springs Beheld that execrable enemy
Again chastised beneath the avenging arm. Too early here his honourable course He closed, and won his noble sepulchre. Where should the soldier rest so worthily As where he fell? Be thou his monument, O City of Rodrigo, yea be thou, To latest time, his trophy and his tomb! Sultans, or Pharaohs of the elder world, Lie not in Mosque or Pyramid enshrined Thus gloriously, nor in so proud a grave.
TO THE MEMORY OF MAJOR GENERAL MACKINNON.
SON of an old and honourable house, Henry Mackinnon from the Hebrides
Drew his descent, but upon English ground An English mother bore him. Dauphiny Beheld the blossom of his opening years; For hoping in that genial clime to save A child of feebler frame, his parents there Awhile their sojourn fix'd: and thus it chanced That in that generous season, when the heart Yet from the world is pure and undefiled, Napoleon Buonaparte was his friend.
The adventurous Corsican, like Henry, then Young, and a stranger in the land of France, Their frequent and their favour'd guest became, Finding a cheerful welcome at all hours, Kindness, esteem, and in the English youth Quick sympathy of apprehensive mind And lofty thought heroic. On the way Of life they parted, not to meet again. Each follow'd war, but, oh! how differently Did the two spirits which till now had grown Like two fair plants, it seem'd, of kindred seed, Develope in that awful element !
For never had benignant nature shower'd More bounteously than on Mackinnon's head Her choicest gifts. Form, features, intellect, Were such as might at once command and win All hearts. In all relationships approved, Son, brother, husband, father, friend, his life Was beautiful; and when in tented fields, Such as the soldier should be in the sight Of God and man was he. Poor praise it were To speak his worth evinced upon the banks Of Douro, Talavera's trophied plain, Busaco's summit, and what other days, Many and glorious all, illustrated
His bright career. Worthier of him to say That in the midst of camps his manly breast Retain❜d its youthful virtue; that he walk'd Through blood and evil uncontaminate, And that the stern necessity of war But nurtured with its painful discipline Thoughtful compassion in that gentle soul, And feelings such as man should cherish still For all of woman born. He met his death When at Rodrigo on the breach he stood Triumphant; to a soldier's wish it came Instant, and in the hour of victory. Mothers and maids of Portugal, oh bring
Your garlands here, and strew his grave with flowers; And lead the children to his monument, Grey-headed sires, for it is holy ground! For tenderness and valour in his heart, As in your own Nunalures, had made Their habitation; for a dearer life.
Never in battle hath been offered up, Since in like cause and in unhappy day, By Zutphen's walls the peerless Sydney fell. 'Tis said that Buonaparte, when he heard How thus among the multitude whose blood Cries out to Heaven upon his guilty head, His early friend had fallen, was touch'd with grief. If aught it may avail him, be that thought, That brief recurrence of humanity
In his hard heart, remember'd in his hour.
« 前へ次へ » |