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Title: Oration on Charles Sumner, Addressed to Colored People

Author: Anonymous

Release Date: January 7, 2019 [EBook #58645]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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       Oration on Charles Sumner, Addressed to Colored People.




       Oration On Charles Sumner, Addressed To Colored People.

           "And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me:
                                Write!
                    Blessed are the dead which die
                             In the Lord!
                That they may rest from their labors,
                           And their works
                   Do follow them."--REV. xiv., 13.

                            By EVANGELINE.

                               ALBANY:
                    WEED, PARSONS & CO., PRINTERS.
                                1874.




                           CHARLES SUMNER.

                             In Memoriam.

                      The nation's heart is sad!
                        Her best beloved son,
                         The great and good!
                  Has winged his flight from earth,
                        And white robed angels
                Shift the gorgeous scenery of the sky
                     To let his soul pass onward
                             To his God!
              Who sent his messenger to bid him "Come."

                           Sumner is dead!
                       Oh! many moons must come
                             And many go
                      Ere we be comforted again,
                          Or hush the sighs
                 That follow him up the golden stair,
              Echoing through all the shining corridors
                              Of heaven,
               Where our beloved one has gone to rest!

                           Sumner is dead!
                           Oh, sad refrain!
                      In which the teeming earth
                          Doth find a voice,
                      And nature's gentle hands
               Are laid within the clasping of our own;
               Stilling the joyous songs of long silent
                                Birds,
              That no awakening sound disturb our grief!

                   She casts her snow white mantle
                      O'er the whispering grass!
                    And hushes the hasty footfall
                          Of coming spring!
                   Calling to the swift March wind
                   To carry along the golden clouds
                          To waiting angels
                   The mournful tidings of our woe!

                           Sumner is dead!
                        O sad repeating words!
                      That beat upon our hearts
                     Like showers of frozen hail!
                          Melting in tears!
                 That swell the tidal wave of sorrow,
               Sweeping adown the great Pacific slopes,
                            Rushing along
            To the sorrowful shores of the broad Atlantic.

                           Sumner is dead!
                           And bitter tears
                          From our sad eyes
                    Doth make us little recompense
                   For his most noble life! Though
           The nations of the earth rise up to comfort us;
             The glorious Orient and the kindly Occident
                      Stretch forth their hands
                                To us
                   Across the spaces of the earth!

                           Sumner is dead!
                       And the tears of heaven
                Are mingling with the tears of earth,
                      Above his new made grave.
                        Showers of stormy rain
             Descend upon the grave of our beloved dead,
                       Whose most honored dust
                             Is heirloom
              To all the sorrowing nations of the earth!

                           Sumner is dead!
                          O mournful hearts,
                      At whose red-lintel doors
                     The angel of sorrow knocks,
                          And knocks again!
           O tear filled eyes! upon whose drooping fringes
                The heavy foot of sorrow presses hard
                            Be comforted!
           For God shall wipe the tears from your sad eyes.




                               Oration.


                           There is a word,
                          When once spoken,
              Fixes its meaning upon every human brain,
                       And finds a habitation,
               Within the sacred chambers of the soul;
                               A word,
             Whether spoken on the shores of the Orient,
                      Lying in slumbrous dreams
                           A-near the sun!
                   Or the land of the snow and ice,
                    Where gorgeous temples arise,
                     Whose translucent walls are
            Builded without the sound of hammer or chisel!
                            Whether spoken
             In the halls of learning or at the fireside,
                          On the ship's deck
                        Or the soldier's camp,
                            Finds an echo
                        In every human heart!

                               A word,
                            At whose sound
                      The pages of history open,
              And the stirring deeds of our forefathers
                   Are marshaled forth to meet us!
        Thousands of trusty swords leap from their scabbards,
                          And the hillsides
                    Are populous with rising life;
                 Long lines of shadowy soldier-forms
                              Start up,
              Forming in dense array along the valleys,
                           Bearing evidence
                             Of the word,
                            Whose meaning
                     Has never been changed since
            The Almighty traced the boundaries of the sea.
                     And bid the earth come forth
                       From the womb of waters!
                        THAT WORD IS FREEDOM!

                                A word
                     Fraught with deepest meaning
                                To ye,
                      O ye down-trodden nation!
                           Who stood alone
             Under the sombre shadow of the past, waiting
                For the angel of the future, the sound
            Of whose foot-falls made the present tremulous
                         With coming tidings!
                               A word,
            Pregnant with joys to the poor fettered slave,
              Toiling in the heat and burthen of the day
                         In southern fields,
                        Where the snowy cotton
               Unfurls its fleecy banner to the breeze!
                     Or in the luxuriant tropics,
                            Where forests
           Are all ablaze with gorgeous flowers, and birds,
                         And the odorous air
                   Is laden with orange and spice!

                              Or toiling
                        In northern latitudes,
                        Where his best efforts
                  And upward tendencies are clogged!
                    His life burdened with sorrow,
                        And ill-requited toil!
                              O ye men!
                    Over whose helpless nakedness
              He cast the mantle of liberty, woven out!
                            Woof and weft!
                   Of the threads of his very life!
                               Ye men!
            Whose faces were never so black as not to show
                      Behind their dark surface
                      The features of a brother!
         Whose hands, unstained by crime, were never so black
                    As to be unfit for his grasp!
                    In loving token of a long lost
                             Brotherhood!

                              O ye men!
                          Whom he discovered
                 Prone in the valley of tribulation!
        Looking with infinite longing, and sad yearning eyes,
                    At the solemn vault of heaven,
                             Where stars
                      Take their nightly course
                     Around a mysterious centre!
                              Wondering,
             If within the folding of those azure doors,
                       There was room for you!
                               Ye men!
                For whom this great apostle of liberty
                 Stretched forth the rod of justice,
                              And smote,
       With a fearless blow, the stony rock of national caste,
                    Till all the waters of liberty
                            Flowed forth!
                      And he gave you to drink!

                             Ye may well
                     Stand with uncovered heads,
                      Above his new made grave,
                  Bowed down with a weight of woe--
           A sense of loss too great for human expression!
                          For the good man,
             Whom God called in the morning of his life,
                         To be a modern Moses
               To an oppressed and down-trodden nation,
                           Upon whose lives
              The iron-foot of bondage made its impress!
                             For the hand
             That bore aloft the proud banner of freedom,
            And scaled the walls of deep-rooted prejudice,
                              To demand
                From the custodians of human liberty,
                   The scroll of your birth-right!
                         _Lies cold and still
                              In death!_

                         The strong right arm
                       That smote the pillar of
                Your wrongs in the dust! Calling back
            Fleeting generations, before whose revelations
                     The white faces of the earth
                             Stood still!
                  Trembling before outraged heaven.
             Upon whose faithful pages every oppression,
                       Every lash of the whip,
                              Every tear
               From long suffering eyes were registered
                        For future reference!
                             "_Beware!_"
             Said Sumner in his great appeal to humanity,
                  "_Of the groans of wounded souls;
                     Oppress not to the uttermost
                           A single heart!
              For one solitary sigh has power to overset
                           A whole world!_"

                         O, ye freed people!
                        Scarce had the name of
                              _Fillmore_
                Traced its guilty lines upon the page
                     Of that most consummate act
                             Of cruelty,
          When a hundred guns from Boston's classic heights
                   Belched forth their teeming fire
                           In ratification
                    Of the great treaty of blood!
                       Like a ponderous knell!
            Their jarring sound boomed out your death cry,
                       Upon the soul of Sumner!
              And all the night, of that most lurid day,
                         Alone with his God.
               His fast retreating and coming footsteps
           Made his silent chamber eloquent with his agony.
                    And kept their mournful rhythm
                     With the throes of his soul!

                            This true man
                      Who stood up in your midst
                       Like a pillar of light!
                Endowed with power to emit a radiance
                             All its own!
                      When friend and foe alike
                  Refusing the succor and protection
                        Of a common humanity;
                    Would force back the hapless,
                            Fugitive slave
                       To the hell of slavery;
                        "_Thus openly_ DEFYING
     _Every sentiment of justice, humanity and christian duty._"
                    Leaving to coming generations
                      A record of human wrongs,
               "_Amongst the crimes of history, another
                       Is about to be recorded,
                    Which no tears can blot out!_"
                     Said the upright statesman.

                             As he stood
                       Amidst the surging tide
                    Of calumny and misconception,
                              Bearing up
            Against the pressure of the waves of "caste."
             His solemn words echoing through the senate:
                         "_By the supreme law
                   Which commands me to do justice;
                         By the comprehensive
                        And conscientious law
                           Of brotherhood;
                         By the constitution
                       I have sworn to support,
                   I am bound to disobey this act!
                              And never,
        In any circumstance, can I render voluntary aid to it!
                  Pains and penalties I will endure!
                   This great wrong I will not do.
                        Better be the victim,
                   Than the instrument of wrong!_"

                                Fired!
                       With Athenian eloquence,
                 Towering aloft in his noble manhood!
                     Bearing the grand proud form
                          Of a Cret'an hero!
                               Hurling!
                        The thunder of heaven
                        Upon the guilty heads
               Of your inhuman and infamous oppressors,
                          Who would enslave
                   The very freedom of his speech!
                               And hang
                     The fetters of party strife
                    Upon his independent thoughts!
                But he rose up in his giant strength,
                     Raising the prostrate column
                           Of your rights,
              Manfully fighting for it, block by block,
                       Every inch of the ground
                              Contested!

                             What wonder
                          That common minds,
                Lacking the moral vertebræ (backbone)
            Of a grand and noble humanity, should deem him
                             Passionate!
                          Yet, "what is life
                      Without passionate feeling
                         To false sentiment?
                It is, indeed, a dangerous auxiliary;
                  But no true sentiment is complete
                             Without it."
                         And truer sentiments
          Never lit the fires of eloquence in a purer breast
                            Than Sumner's!
                A breast that heaved with indignation
                       For your bitter wrongs,
              And the piteous spectacle of human nature
                    That Taney's mandate presented
                      To the eyes of the world!

                                That,
                           "_The black man_
         _Has no rights the white man is bound to respect._"
                            O! omnipotent
                         And omnipresent God!
                   Who made us in thine own image,
                              Breathing
                        Thine own pure breath
                    Into our dust-created bodies!
                       Giving of thine own life
                             A semblance
       So great in all its purity so grand in all its fulness,
               That our humanity can scarce contain it!
              So, whether our faces be black, or whether
                            They be white,
                   If we but retain thy semblance,
                          And keep _within_

                              The sacred
                        Cloister of our souls
                 The lamp that thou didst consecrate
                               And gave
                     Into our most solemn keeping
              To illuminate the fair pages of our lives,
                               And shed
                     Its holy light upon the path
        That lies along the shimmering moon-beams of the sky,
                       Upon whose silver stair
                        Expectant angels wait;
             Whose luminous wings enfold us round about,
                       Bearing our happy souls
                      Beyond the sapphire gates
                             To the home
                         From whence we came
                       _We are as one to thee!_
               _And all the thinking, reasoning nations
                            Of the earth!_

                              Once only
                    In the history of this nation,
                   The floor of the senate chamber
                  Dedicated to justice and liberty,
                      Is stained with the blood
                             Of a martyr!
            He lay helpless and lifeless along that floor,
                       Like an Athenian warrior
                 Slain upon the altar of his country!
                        His grand, proud head
                      Dyed with the crimson tide
                        Of his own life blood!
            His pale, cold face, and white soundless lips
                 Appealing in their speechless agony
       To the banner of his country, that hung in starry folds
                           Above his head!
                The hand that smote him to the earth,
                    Severed the life-chord of his
                         Physical well-being!

                                 But,
                          Out of the blood,
                 Out of the turmoil, the warfare and
                        Passionate strivings,
                     Out of the pain and anguish,
                    Out of the ruin and solitude,
           Out of the great silence that lay upon his life,
                            There rose up
                         A spirit of grandeur
             With the thews and sinews of Divine wisdom!
                   A grander, nobler, truer manhood
                       Wrought out of the fires
                         Of anguish and pain!
             A wisdom that has gone its slow, sure round
                       Upon the wheels of time,
              Calling out of your own nation a full man
                         To sit in the chair
               Of him who smote your patriot and friend
                         At his post of duty!

                                 Out
                        From the ruin wrought
                By a thoughtless and passionate hand!
                   Sumner, the Christian statesman
                       Arose grander than ever!
                      Daring to speak the truth
             Having the moral courage to wear it proudly
                            Upon his lips!
                     Flooding its glorious light
                    Upon the actions of his life!
                          Oh ! How we revere
                    The man who speaks the truth!
                       Whose words and actions
                Call no unhealthy effort to the mind!
                In winnowing out the one bright grain
                               Of truth
                From the chaff of shiftless falsehood!
                The tired brain, weary with analyzing
            Sought rest in his statements, nor placed them
                         Within its crucible!

                              O, truth!
                        Thou art born of God!
                           On thy fair brow
                 The jeweled crown of purity gleams!
                             Thy garments
               Are luminous with shimmering star-light
                               O truth!
                  Thou semblance of the living God!
                What have we not borne, what suffered
                              For thee!
                            Misconception
                      Darkens thy fair features!
         Misconstruction covers thee with her shadowy mantle!
                            Throwing wide
                      The flood-gates of sorrow
                  That rush from the bitter fountain
                         Of the grieved soul!
                     In thy right hand is a crown
                        Of glory! In thy left
                         A crown of _thorns_!

                                Truth
                        Is a spirit of glory!
                   A body of transcendent grandeur!
                         Sinewy and tenacious
                     For the human mind to grasp!
                       The nations of the Earth
                         Stand forth to honor
                           A man of truth,
                  And lay their tribute at his feet!
                           Alas! too often
                        _After_ his human ear,
               Strained to the utmost tension to catch
                          The far off sound,
                     _After_ his throbbing heart!
               Hungering for human sympathy, thirsting
                         For the cup of love
                 Starving for the kindly hand-grasp,
                     Tired, and worn, and weary,
                          Lays down to die!

                                 And
                        The dread Saul's march
                      Thrilling its weird music
                           Above his grave,
              Is but an echo of dead expectancy and woe!
                      That fall upon our hearts
                 Like the rustling leaves of autumn!
                                 Ah!
                        There are human faces
                      Meeting our eyes each day,
                                Which,
                      If they lay cold and still
               The air would rend with our lamentations
                             And sorrow!
                  And our sad tears would vainly try
                      To wash the lines of care
                        From their dead faces!
              That fill the haunted chamber of our souls
                            For evermore!

                                 Yet!
                         No word of sympathy,
                        No outstretched hand,
                 Bore to their full expectant hearts
                               A token!
                          No kindling glance
                     Of sympathetic brotherhood;
                      Bore to their asking eyes
                       "I have a care of thee!"
                Thus we go on day after day, wrapping
            The mantle of selfishness round our humanity!
                        Looking so earthward,
                  The tears of our grieving brother
                         Fall upon our feet!
                         O, have a care that
         No such sin as this be recorded in Heaven's register
                      To burthen your free souls
                           As ye go upward!

                                 When
                            The weary day
                       Lays down her tired head
                 Upon the dreamy pillow of the past,
                  Closing the silent gates of night
                     On her departing foot-falls!
               Throwing back upon our thrilling senses
                       The curtains of mystery!
                 That float upon the silence and hush
                         Of the night season!
                       Making the soundless air
                         Tremulous with life!
                              'Tis then,
                          And not till then.
                  Pervaded by a divine restlessness
                               We kneel
            And loose our earthly shoes from off our feet
                   For the ground whereon we stand
                               Is holy!

                                Alone,
                      With the divine sculptor,
                        Whose unerring chisel,
           Rounds off the uneven curves and awkward corners
                        Of our erring nature,
                          The heroic statue
                  Is wrought out of roughest marble!
                           So, the good man
                  Is moulded out of his very faults!
                      Thus the great master hand
                        With divine precision
              Measured the breadth and depth and height
                              Of Sumner!
                    To fill with honor and credit
                          The royal shrine;
              The grand and noble niche prepared for him
                              In heaven,
                     And in the stirring history
                            Of the world!

                            There are men
                      So utterly narrow-minded,
                     So wanting in moral vertebræ
         And grand human nature, that they are never greatly
                               Tempted!
                                Satan,
               With discriminating acumen, seeks higher
                           Prey than these!
               They are all too flimsy, weak, and crude
                          For his purposes!
                                 But,
               Upon the men of moral breadth, of depths
                            Of human pity;
               Of height of divine abiding! Some prince
                      Of the sons of the earth,
                         Whom God has chosen
                 For some great epoch in our history,
                     The whole artillery of hell
                         Is brought to bear!

                                 Men
                      Tried and trusted of God!
                   Fitted to go down to the arena,
           "To fight the great fight," from the going down
                      To the rising of the sun!
           Struggling with some deadly temptation that has
                              Locked him
                        In its sinewy embrace;
                     Or taking some wild passion
                            By the throat,
                 And strangling it out of existence.
                                These,
            The large-hearted, square-headed, high minded,
                           Men of history,
                     Are his best stock in trade!
            To these temptation comes! _and if they fall_,
                He lashes them to his chariot wheels,
                     And carries them in triumph
                              Into hell!

                             But Sumner,
                    The man of princely integrity,
             Accepted no defeat, acknowledged no tempter!
                            The lobbyist,
               Engaged in tunneling under human nature,
                      Fled from before his face!
                             The briber,
                     Whose soft insinuating palm
             Takes kindly to the hands of his fellow man!
                                 He,
                       Who cometh with a smile,
                      And asketh for no receipt!
                                 He,
                  Whose loosened purse strings, bind
                        The tender conscience
                With cords, gripped by the sinewy hand
                              Of Satan,
                  Turns aside to let Sumner pass on;
                     _The utterly incorruptible!_

                              'Tis thus,
                          Viewing the great
               Defender of the constitution surrounded
              By an atmosphere of bribery and corruption
                                Of men
               Selling the very sinews of their country
                       For just so many dollars
                          Of bitter enemies,
                         Of unstable friends;
                          Of hurry and rush
                         Of weak legislation;
                  Of "the groans of wounded souls;"
                   Of falsehood and moral contagion
                        That we love him best.
                    For amidst the soulless throng
                 He stood up in his peerless manhood
                       Like a pillar of truth,
                  And carried with him the brightest
                          Stars of the age!

                          'Twas not in vain
                               He sat,
                         A studious disciple
                     At the royal feet of wisdom!
           Culling the sweets of knowledge from her tomes!
                             Not in vain
             Did he visit other lands, and other climes,
                              Filling up
                  The vast storehouses of his mind,
                           With the rarest
                     And richest gems of culture,
             The grand position he had taken in the great
                             Human family
                             Needed this!
              He stood like a great tree in the forest,
                 The branches of which stretched out
                                So far
                    As to cover the oppressed ones
                         Of the whole world!

                              Let us all
                        Kindle our aspirations
                At his shrine! For the loftiest ideas
                            Flow from him!
                This our modern Solomon who challenged
                     The admiration of the world!
                    Whose wise and pure character
                    Stands out before us to-night
                                As one
               That fills the void in our highest ideas
                             Of manhood!
                       The light of his example
                 Throws its clear defining ray along
                      The pathway of our lives;
              Keeping our eye upon that beacon of light
                        We shall not stumble,
             But fulfill our duties truthfully, manfully,
                        And with a pure heart!

                            His character,
                  In its human and divine greatness,
                     Has a wondrous completeness!
                            Comprehensive
            In its compact firmness, its grasp of justice.
                                Vital
                In its rounded purity, its magnanimous
                              Humanity!
                                Subtle
                   In its fine intuitive sympathy!
                                Grand
                     In its lofty ideas of duty!
                                  He
             Has left us a rich inheritance not in lands
                            Or tenements,
               But in jewels of silver, jewels of gold,
                         And precious stones!
                Heir-looms that shall crown our lives
                             With honor!

                             These jewels
               Dived for, in fathoms deep of the waters
                           Of tribulation,
                       Are our common heritage!
                                 His
         Nobility of character, caught from divine communing!
                                 His
             Devotion to truth and integrity of purpose!
                                 His
               Allegiance to pure principles and honor!
                                 His
                  Grand moral and physical courage,
                       And his great humanity!
               Towering in strength, like a giant tree
                            In the forest,
                     These are the casket of gems
                    He has willed to our keeping,
                         To adorn our lives!

                           We stand amazed
                       At the pyramid of work,
                Of toilsome labors, he has raised up!
                                Labors
               Associated with your rise, progression,
                          And preservation!
              The pages of his life are illuminated with
                       The records of his toil!
                             These facts
         Should pass into your lives, elevating and ennobling
                            Your efforts!
                        Raising you upward to
                   The true dignity of daily labor!
                       Ye diggers of the soil,
                Remember that he was a digger amongst
                         The roots of wisdom!
                 Remember that _he_ was pre-eminently
                              A laborer,
                   Whose deeds have passed securely
                           Into the history
                            Of the world!

                                 His
                            Work is done!
                The temple is built all but the crest,
              And to tender and loyal hands he has left
                        The finishing thereof!
                He has fulfilled the mission to which
                           God called him!
                                 He,
                   With the bright band of thinkers
                            And laborers,
             Has brought you out of bondage, of Egyptian
                               Darkness
                 To the glorious noon day of freedom,
                          The promised land
                 Is yours by divine and human right!
               From his immense altitude, with the eyes
                             Of prophesy,
                    He could see you possessed of
                          Its every corner!

                                 His
                           Wreath is woven!
                   Not upon the garniture of costly
                              Sepulchre,
               But upon the loving and sorrowing hearts
                  Of four millions of freed people!
                               Not upon
                          The marble statue,
               But upon the appreciative consciousness
                        Of the world at large!
                         His wreath is woven!
                    Every leaf bedewed with tears!
             Every flower wreathed in with lamentations!
           Tied with the heart-strings of a nation's love!
               But, "we mourn not as one without hope!"
                 For "I am the resurrection and life
                           "Saith the Lord!
             He who believeth in me, though he were dead
                         Yet shall he live."

                              Ye women!
                       Upon whose kindly bosoms
                       Lisping children nestle!
                             _Remember!_
            For the eyes that saw deepest into your human
                                 Woe,
                   And trembled in humid tenderness
                     For your degraded humanity,
                        _Are closed for ever!_
                             _Remember!_
                             For the lips
                   That broke your galling fetters
               With the fiery thunder of his manhood's
                              Eloquence!
                            Re-adjusting,
                    In all its God-given symmetry,
                       The disjointed framework
                         Of your human lives,
                             Are stilled!

                              Ye women!
                           Who stood alone,
                    On the outer fringes of proud
                              Humanity!
                Appealing in your helpless degradation
                      To the pity of the world!
                             _Remember!_
                             For the hand
                        That made room for you
                  Amongst the nations of the earth,
                          And placed a seat
                               For you
                    In the halls of civilization!
                             _Remember!_
                            For the hand,
                  That dug out of the shifting sands
                          Of public opinion
              The gem you wear proudly upon your bosoms,
                        _Lies cold in death!_

                              Ye women,
                             _Remember!_
                   As ye take a last lingering look
                             At the face
                         Of your dead martyr,
                 On which the surging tide of calumny
                          And misconception
                  Have left their harrowing traces,
                             That he was
                The great high priest of your nation,
                             Ministering
                     To its highest aspirations!
                             _Remember!_
                               The hand
                That lies with such pathetic attitude
                        Above his quiet bosom,
                   Opened wide the gates of freedom
                       To your weary footsteps,
                           And let you in!

                             O ye women!
                             _Remember!_
                            And take heed
                 What influence ye bring to bear upon
                        The coming generation!
                             For ye, too,
                          Form a strong link
                  In the chain of our civilization!
                  Woman, in all ages, in all climes,
                           White and black,
               Have swayed an influence over the world
                        For evil or for good,
             Which has swept the black tide of iniquity,
           Whose waters reach down to the uttermost depths
                               Of hell;
             Or the gentle waves of good, freighted with
                        A nation's blessings!
                Upon the waves, _whose reflex actions
                      Are the currents that flow
                            From heaven_!

                             O ye women!
                             _Remember!_
                           And forget not!
                    Your great patriot and friend
                         Left to your keeping
               The jewels of divine and human greatness
                        Washed with his tears!
                      Brightened with his love!
                             _Remember!_
                           And forget not!
            The intertwining of your prayer extended hands
                           Forms a stairway
                      By which your nation hope
                       To reach all greatness,
                      All purity, all grandeur,
                             And at last
              To follow your leader up the shining stair
                              To heaven!

                                  As
                        The voice of sympathy
                       Hath a thousand tongues,
                  Making the silent mystery of night
                  Eloquent with gentle whisperings,
              So, out of the seclusion of my quiet life,
                                To ye
             O ye millions of freed people, I have come!
                To ye my sympathies go forth to-night.
                             Sympathies,
          At whose fountain head, the angel of purity sits;
                  And from her sacred niche, beholds
                  The coming and the going thereof.
                                For ye
              Whom he called his children, were knit in
                    With every fibre of his heart;
                        And your wrongs echoed
                To the innermost chamber of his soul,
                                To ye
                        His loss is greatest!

                              O ye men!
                            Who loved him
                      With a love past telling!
                 Be the better for his noble efforts!
                 Let the picture of his glorious life
                     Hang ever before your eyes!
        Sanctifying your efforts, ennobling your aspirations!
                             He suffered
                 In the throes of agony to give birth
                         To a higher manhood!
                          _Be that manhood!_
                  True, you have been buffetted and
                            Rudely tossed,
               But that has passed into the oblivion of
                          The receding age!
                        The present and future
                   Are open to you as never before!
                  Helping hands are extended to you!
                  _Take care of your opportunities!_

                                Ye men
                           Cultivate truth!
                      For honor and independence
                  Follow quickly upon its footsteps!
                              'Tis true
                   The standard of Sumner is high!
             But a-down the ladder of his life there are
                        Steps of granite mould
                      That will bear you upward
                             And onward!
               _Be ye governed by no ignoble motives!_
             The time is not far distant when the missing
                               Fringes
                  Of the glorious mantle of liberty
                   Will be sewn on by loving hands!
                         Be prepared for it!
                     Receive it upon your knees,
                        With uncovered heads!
                      Remembering whose hand had
                           Wrought it out!

                              Be ye sure
                          It is borne to ye
                Within the folding of an angel's wing!
                             'Tis yours!
                       By the voice of heaven!
                             'Tis yours!
                        By the voice of earth!
               The pinnacle of your temple of freedom!
           The flag that will flutter freely o'er its top!
                       "O, my bill! My bill!!"
                He cried in the last agonies of death!
                 "Take care of my civil rights bill!"
                        Were his solemn words,
                 As the messenger of death stood upon
                            His threshold!
                   "_O, don't let the bill fail!_"
              Was his dying injunction, as he sought out
                   With his glazing eye, the friend
                   Who kissed his hand in token of
                         The solemn covenant!

                               "_Take_
                       _Care of your rights!_"
                 Comes across the ocean of eternity,
                  A solemn message from your friend
                           And benefactor!
                          Be worthy of him!
              Raise the standard of your people higher,
                          And higher still!
                           To-day is yours!
               Grasp firm hold of it, for it cometh not
                  Again! Let the world see and note
                           The heroic fibre
                        Of which you are made!
                 Remember the gates of a great future
                           Are open to you!
          Educate yourselves, your women and your children,
                       Inaugurate and carry on
                      Reform within yourselves;
                  Enlarge your minds!  Quicken your
              Intelligence, and follow in the footsteps
                              Of Sumner!

                               Ye men,
                         Look well and wisely
                      To your political welfare!
                 Let not the foul fingers of bribery
                            And corruption
                   Pollute the pure scroll of your
                             Birthright!
             Remember the loving laborers upon the walls
                   Of liberty's republican temple.
                     A temple built on free soil!
           "Its corner stone," said Sumner, "is _freedom_;
                  Its broad, all sustaining arches,
                  _Truth_, _justice_ and _humanity_!
               Like the ancient Roman capitol, at once
                     A _temple_ and a _citadel_!
        Fit shrine for the genius of _American institutions_."
                    _A shrine at whose high Altar
           The best and noblest of the land doth minister!
               A temple wherein the lamp of human pity
           Suspended by the chain of universal brotherhood
                     Swings its perpetual light!_

                                Adieu
                           Charles Sumner!
                   Thou friend of humanity, Adieu!
                         Never! Till the sun
                    Folds up his gorgeous mantle!
                       Hiding his burning head
                     In the dark valley of chaos!
                                Never!
                      Till the moon's pale hand
                  Forgets to throw her silver shower
                       A-down the ether track!
                                Never!
                        Till the angels forget
                To replenish the glistening starlight
                             In the sky!
                                Never!
                 Till the great surging deep recedes
                      To the mysterious outlet,
                     From whence the voice of God
                           Called it forth!

                                Never!
                      Till the murmuring shells
                     Lying along the sunny shores
                         Forget their music!
                                Never!
                  Till the flowers hide their heads
                   Upon the dying heart of nature,
                       Sighing out the requiem
                       "There is no more life!"
              And the birds go silently to their death!
                                Never!
                          Till human hearts
                     Throb out their last breath
                      _Shalt thou be forgotten_!
                       Nay! Not even then! For
                 As we go upward on our last journey
            We'll see thy name with the names of the just
                      Written in letters of gold
                           Across the sky!

                               _Finis._




[Illustration: Muse]

"It will take a long time to get the whole truth told about that noble
man, and many voices to tell it."

HENRY W. LONGFELLOW.

CAMBRIDGE, May 11, 1874.




Transcriber's Notes:

Missing or obscured punctuation was corrected.

Typographical errors were silently corrected.





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