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Gordon, Hanford Lennox, 1836-1920

"The Feast of the Virgins and Other Poems"

He was shot down on
his boat just as he had landed on the opposite shore the last of those
who fled from the burning village to the ferry-landing. The Indians
disemboweled his dead body, cut off the head, hands and feet and thrust
them into the cavity. See _Heard's Hist. Sioux War_, p 67.]

Crouching in the early morning,
Came the swarth and naked "Sioux;"[CF]
On the village, without warning,
Fell the sudden, savage blow.
Horrid yell and crack of rifle
Mingle as the flames arise;--
With the tomahawk they stifle
Mothers' wails and children's cries.
Men and women to the ferry
Fly from many a blazing cot;--
Brave and ready--grim and steady,
Mauley mans the ferry-boat.
Can they cross the ambushed river?
'Tis for life the only chance;
Only this may some deliver
From the scalping-knife and lance.
Through the throng of wailing women
Frantic men in terror burst;--
"Back, ye cowards!" thundered Mauley,--
"I will take the women first!"
Then with brawny arms and lever
Back the craven men he smote.
Brave and ready--grim and steady,
Mauley mans the ferry-boat.
To and fro across the river
Plies the little mercy-craft,
While from ambushed gun and quiver
On it falls the fatal shaft.


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