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1906- Poetry
Charlotte Daily Observer 5/20/1906 Sec.3 p. 3 and 5/20/1906 Sec.3, p. 5
ODE TO NORTH CAROLINA
PATTIE WILLIAMS GEE.
To stay the rocks from heralding the shame
That in oblivion of men’s praise or blame
Her stalwart sons have stood with silent tongue
And the proud Mother’s paean is unsung,
A daughter of the pines by Honor called
Would climb Old Bald,
From whose Titanic brim
Down slopes which sweep to greet the low sea’s rim
Vulcanus rolled
With sombrous ores, his uncut gems and rugged gold;
Demeter swung her surging plumes—
All her arms held of matchless bloom, of subtle beauty and of wild perfumes—
And where tall Tuscaroras roamed,
Great Roanoke’s waters fumed and foamed,
The fluttering, floating, mellow-throated sung,
Upon the wind’s exultant music flung—
Would gonfalons of eager song unfold
Above the wold
Fruited and plumed,
Fern-clothed and bloomed
Bride for the Sun
To love, to woo, to feast his amorous lips upon;
And over oriole mountain peaks
Where circling eagles’ piercing shrieks
Are lost in cloud-blown skies.
—II—
O, Carolinians, lift your eyes!
O, Carolinians, lift your eyes
And heed it well
That it is yours amid surpassing loveliness to dwell!
—III—
Yours the consecrated sod
Which first the European trod,
Where the first suppliant knelt to God
On this wide continent;
Yours the Mother on whose breast,
Smiling in confiding rest,
On whose patriotic breast,
Lay the first American;
And to your children’s children tell,
(O, Carolinians, heed it well!)
That here our history began;
That here the woman stricken sore
Scorned to spare the sons she bore.
Say no solemn rite was said
O’er the first for freedom dead,
The first red blood for freedom shed,
But tell them, Carolinians, how
From wounds and bruise of sword and lance,
From purple pools of Alamance,
There sprang the flower of Mecklenburg,
The laurel flower sprang, and how
Our blood-wrought crown of Liberty
Crowned first their Mother’s brow!
—IV—
O, blood-wrought crown of Liberty,
So doubly dear, so fair!
O, blood-wet leaves of Liberty
Which drenched her shining hair
When foes unnumbered sacked her shores
And left her, naked, with disheveled hair,
And left a leprous reptile at her doors,
A leprous reptile that a woman may not name,
O, Liberty, O, Liberty, men blush at thy great name!
Since Nero burned imperial Rome
And lit his lights beneath her dome
Was known no scourge like this!
But who could bear to lift a crucifix for anguished lips to kiss?
Ah, who could bear to stir a woman’s pain,
Whose cannons’ mouths are closed, whose guns, corrosive, cold,
Lie still,
And o’er whose wind-swept hill
Where sleep her sacred slain
A flawless moon unfolds in sympathy
To mount in glory and in glory wane,
Whose silver plain
The peaceful stars o’er-flood with silent melody to light the reign
Of love where in the strong New South is born —
Born of the Old South’s marvelous resources,
Born of the Old South’s wondrous water courses
From snow-crowned mountains rushing clear and cold
Through fields of brilliant bloom and laughing corn—
A joyous Naiad clothed in robes of gold!
—V—
But words would fail my timid muse to tell
Of all my Mother’s virtues or to dwell
Upon each deed chivalric of her sons;
Of that inviolate soil o’er which no foreign flag was ever flung;
Of Ashe, Waddell and Harnett, whose “resistance was unto death.”
Bold Purpose flowered to Promise, strong incipient life to breath;
Of Moore’s lonely Creek where Victory first rung
Her solemn bells; of Ramseur’s Mill
And the four hundred under Locke
Who stilled the booming of a thousand guns;
Of Joseph Graham whose twenty score
Not once but thrice repulsed four thousand more
Flung powerless upon a human rock;
Of that immortal field in Memory’s raptured fabric woven
Whereon no foe was lost, no foe uncaptured or uncloven;
Of her who won a warrior’s crest
And blazoned Charlotte with the Hornet’s Nest,
With the proud ‘scutcheon of the Hornet’s Nest;
Or of Penelope of old
Leading, as chronicles relate,
The women of bold Edenton to hold
High council and protest
Against the coercion of an alien State
In mad exaction of an alien tax;
Of New Berne, Hillsboro and of Halifax;
And of her heroes in two later wars
Who bore her colors proudly, gladly died to serve her cause!
—VI—
But these are past,
These iron days are past
And though the adamant in which our souls were cast
No longer binds,
The Spirit which inspired them lives and burns
And on the winds
Of Duty seaward turns—
—VII—
Seaward where torn flags are trailing
Over crushed and crumbling walls;
Women wailing,
Captives sighing,
Brave men praying, fighting, dying
To be free from ancient thralls;
And again our righteous Mother,
Eager to relieve another,
Instant at her country’s call,
Sends one with this Spirit in him,
“To return with valour’s guerdon” —
This her hymn’s eternal burden—
“Or beneath a soldier’s pall!”
(Oh, the pity and the heartache
And the anguish of it all!)
For Alamance and Bethel’s story
Rung again amid the glory,
Rung again when at the daybreak
With the Southern fire within him,
With his father’s sword without him,
With the old flag wrapped about him,
(Oh, the triumph and the glory
And the rapture of it all!)
For his country’s vindication,
For a friend’s amelioration,
For the healing of his nation
And its rehabilitation
Gallant Bagley bleeds and falls!
—VIII—
Yes, Alamance and Bethel’s story
Told again amid the glory
Challenges a nation’s praise,
Challenges the world’s amaze!
—IX—
Oh, with this Spirit, Carolinians
Onward to those pure dominions
Overspread by angels’ pinions,
By the strong Thought angels’ pinions;
Through all dreaming
With its leaning
Toward the infinite;
Through all seeming,
To God’s meaning,
Clear and definite;
Onward to those pure dominions
Overspread by angels’ pinions
Where divine, intensest light is;
Turn not backward where the night is,
For the sun, full-orbed, is risen;
Myriad voices call you. Listen.
“Onward with your souls unfettered;
Lifting standards golden-lettered,
‘Esse Quam Videri’ graven,
Which no coward hands nor craven
Dare upraise!” The Future calls you,
All her luminous doors uncloses,
Pelts you with her full-blown roses;
Heavenly Art and Music call you,
Science, Letters, Learning, call you,
All the Intellects and Sages
Of the lost and buried ages
Chanting in a glad acclaim;
Brothers, she who bore you, calls you;
Crown her with a deathless fame.
THE VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION. 5/20/1906 Sec.3, p. 5
(This poem, which was written by Rev. Dr. Walter W. Moore, president of Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Va., won the $50 prize offered by The Observer in 1898 for the best poem on the Mecklenburg Declaration. It was read for the first time on the occasion of the Mecklenburg Independence Day celebration, May 20th, 1898.)
To Piedmont Carolina, where virgin prairie soil
Bespoke abundant harvests to reward the tiller’s toil,
From homes beyond the ocean there came in days of old
A band of sturdy heroes, a race of yeoman bold.
On all Catawba’s uplands—for there they found their rest,
Those woods and wide savannahs fulfilled their longing quest—
They reared their modest dwelling, they built the kirk and school,
For well they knew how danger grew from skeptic and from fool.
Behind the walls of Derry their fathers’ faith in God
Had filled their souls with courage to defy the tyrant’s rod;
‘Twere folly then to fancy that sons of sires like these
Would bear a yoke of bondage or obey unjust decrees.
Their heirloom was a Volume which taught the rights of man,
And made the least a king and priest free from despotic ban;
The people are the sovereigns, with rights inalienate,
The people make the government; the people are the State.
This truth was taught by Craighead, thus Mecklenburg believed,
And when oppressive measures passed, her sons were not deceived;
While others talked of Redress as subjects of the crown,
They boldly broke the tyrant’s yoke, and flung the gauntlet down.
From seven congregations in which they preached and prayed,
From woodlands and plantations, in homespun garb arrayed,
These yeoman rode to Charlotte, these men of mien sedate,
While high emprise shone in their eyes—they came to found the State.
And there these dauntless statesmen, in ringing words and high,
Declared their independence—“We’ll win it or we’ll die;
With lives and sacred honor, with fortunes great or small,
We will serve the cause of freedom, we will break the Briton’s thrall.”
Next year the nation followed where Mecklenburg had lead,
To all the world, with flag unfurled, her high resolve she read:
“No more shall sons of freemen endure the tyrant’s rod,
This land shall be as freedom free, or we forsworn to God.”
Though flaming broil of battle where Britons bravest stood,
On field and flood, by blade and blood, they made their pledges good.
And now, where’ere their banner floats over land and sea,
With grateful lays the people praise the men who made us free.
Then up with granite column inscribed with lofty phrase,
Let Mecklenburg’s achievements resound through endless days;
Her sons were first to utter the disenthralling word,
Let men proclaim their deathless name till all the world has heard.