This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Night after the Battle.

Yet, oh! that fathomless gulf that surged between two shores of light,
Seemed like a century's pain compressed and coiled up into a night.

I thought, while I stayed on that battle field, of the waste around me there,
And bared my bleeding heart, that God might read its muttered prayer;
A prayer that asked for a fiery rod of lightnings in His hand,
To strike the sod where the traitor trod, and burn his track from the land;
A prayer that sued for the drops of rain in the eyes of the coining years,
To quench the sensuous smile of earth with a weight of heaven's pure tears.

Columbia—oh! my country, weep!—weep!—thou art blind, insane!
Thy dear eyes stare, and thy hollow laugh is worse than a shriek of pain.
Why is the voice of thy revelry ringing through home and hall,
While lustrous drops of thy precious life bleed on thy joys' black pall?

18