The Poetry Corner

Death Of President Lincoln.

By Nora Pembroke (Margaret Moran Dixon McDougall)

In the Capitol is mourning, Mourning and woe this day, For a nation's heart is throbbing-- A great man has passed away It was yester'even only Rejoicing wild and high, Waving flags and shouting people Proclaimed a victory For our God had led our armies, In the cause of truth and right, It was, therefore, the brave Southren Had bowed to Northern might. Then flashed o'er the land the tidings, The flush of joy to quell, Fallen is the people's hero, As William the Silent fell. The stealthy step of the panther, The tiger's cruel eye; A flash--and the wail of a nation Rang in that terrified cry. Shame falls on the daring Southren, Woe on the Southren land, The stars and bars are quartered With the murderer's bloody hand Well--he stood to his duty firmly, Rebellion's waves rolled high, He dared to be true and simple To battle a gilded lie And the life has died out of treason, Died with oppression and wrong, The shame is wiped from the nation Worn as a jewel so long But he, in the hour of triumph Who wise and firmly stood Planning for them large mercies, Lies weltering in his blood. For a cause so vile meet ending, To set with a murder stain, The "sum of human villainy" Should die with the brand of Cain Lay him down with a nation's weeping, Lay him down with the heart's deep prayer That the mantle of the martyr Fall on the vacant chair