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THE SLAVE'S COMPLAINT..

WIDE Over the tremulous sea

The moon spread her mantle of light, And the gale, dying gently away,

Breathed soft on the bosom of night. On the forecastle Marraton stood,

And pour'd forth his sorrowful tale, His tears fell unseen in the flood,

His sighs pass'd unheard on the gale.

'Ah wretch!' in wild anguish he cried,
، From country and liberty torn;
Ah Marraton! would thou hadst died

Ere o'er the salt wave thou wast borne.
Through the groves of Angola I stray'd,
Love and Hope made my bosom their own;
For I talk'd with my favourite maid,

Nor dream'd of the sorrows to come.

، From the thicket the man-hunter sprung,
My cries echo'd loud through the air;
There was fury and wrath on his tongue,
He was deaf to the shrieks of despair.
Accursed be the merciless band

That his love could from Marraton tear,
And blasted this impotent hand

That was sever'd from all I held dear.

، Flow, ye tears, down my cheeks ever flow, Still let sleep from my eyelids depart;

And still may the arrows of woe

Drink deep of the streams of my heart.

But hark! on the silence of night,
My Addela's accents I hear,

And mournful, beneath the wan light,
I see her loved image appear.

'Slow o'er the smooth ocean she glides,
Like the gleam that hangs light on the wave;
And fondly her lover she chides

That lingers so long from his grave. Ah Marraton ! haste ye, she cries,

Here the reign of Oppression is o'er,
Here the tyrant is robb'd of his prize,
And Addela sorrows no more.

، Now sinking amid the dim ray,
Her form seems to fade on my view:
O, stay thee! my Addela stay!

She beckons, and I must pursue.
To-morrow the white man in vain
Shall proudly account me his slave;
My shackles I plunge in the main,
And rush to the realms of the brave.'

ROSCOE.

THE NEGRO'S COMPLAINT.

FORCED from home and all its pleasures,
Afric's coast I left forlorn,

To increase a stranger's treasures,
O'er the raging billows borne.
Men from England bought and sold me,
Paid my price in paltry gold;

But, though slave they have enroll'd me,
Minds are never to be sold.

Still in thought as free as ever,

What are England's rights, I ask,
Me from my delights to sever,
Me to torture, me to task?
Fleecy locks and black complexion
Cannot forfeit Nature's claim;
Skins may differ, but affection

Dwells in white and black the same.

Why did all-creating Nature

Make the plant for which we toil? Sighs must fan it, tears must water, Sweat of ours must dress the soil. Think, ye masters iron hearted, Lolling at your jovial boards; Think how many backs have smarted For the sweets your cane affords.

Is there, as ye sometimes tell us,
Is there one who reigns on high?
Has he bid you buy and sell us,
Speaking from his throne the sky?
Ask him if your knotted scourges,
Fetters, blood-extorting screws
Are the means that duty urges
Agents of his will to use?

Hark! he answers-wild tornadoes,
Strewing yonder sea with wrecks,
Wasting towns, plantations, meadows,
Are the voice with which he speaks.
He, foreseeing what vexations

Afric's sons should undergo, Fix'd their tyrants' habitations

Where his whirlwind answers-no!

By our blood in Afric wasted,

Ere our necks received the chain;
By the miseries that we tasted,
Crossing in your barks the main;
By our sufferings, since ye brought us
To the man-degrading mart;
All sustain❜d by patience, taught us
Only by a broken heart;

Deem our nation brutes no longer,
Till some reason ye shall find
Worthier of regard, and stronger
Than the colour of our kind.
Slaves of gold, whose sordid dealings
Tarnish all your boasted powers,
Prove that ye have human feelings
Ere ye proudly question ours!

COWPER.

ABBA THULE*.

I CLIMB the highest cliff; I-hear the sound
Of dashing waves; I gaze intent around;
I mark the sun that orient lifts his head!
I mark the sea's lone rule beneath him spread:
But not a speck can my long straining eye,
A shadow, o'er the tossing waste descry,
That I might weep tears of delight, and say,
It is the bark that bore my child away!' [eye
Thou sun, that beamest bright, beneath whose
The worlds unknown, and outstretch'd waters lie,

* See Keate's History of the Pelew Islands. VOL. IV.

S

Dost thou behold him now? On some rude shore,
Around whose crags the cheerless billows roar,
Watching the' unwearied surges doth he stand,
And think upon his father's distant land?
Or has his heart forgot, so far away,

These native scenes, where rocks and torrents gray,
The tall bananas whispering to the breeze,
The shores, the sound of these encircling seas,
Heard from his infant days, and the piled heap
Of holy stones where his forefathers sleep?

Ah! me, till sunk by sorrow, I shall dwell
With them forgetful in the narrow cell,
Never shall time from my fond heart efface
His image; oft his shadow I shall trace
Upon the glimmering waters, when on high
The white moon wanders through the cloudless sky.
Oft in my silent cave (when to its fire
From the night's rushing tempest we retire)
I shall behold his form, his aspect bland:
I shall retrace his footsteps in the sand;
And, when the hollow-sounding surges swell,
Still think I listen to his echoing shell.

Would I had perish'd ere that hapless day,
When the tall vessel, in its trim array,
First rush'd upon the sounding surge, and bore
My age's comfort from the sheltering shore !
I saw it spread its white wings to the wind-
Too soon it left these hills and woods behind-
Gazing, its course I follow'd till mine eye
No longer could its distant track descry;
Till on the confines of the billows hoar

A while it hung, and then was seen no more;
And only the blue hollow heaven I spied,
And the long waste of waters tossing wide.

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