Page:What cheer, or, Roger Williams in banishment (1896).pdf/153

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LIII.

Now struggling by the flames they past from sight,
  For Williams lingered yet to guard the cave;
And there, enveloped in a deeper night,
  With fiercer fury did the contest rave;—
The blow, the wrench, the pantings of the fight,
  The crash of branches and of thickets gave
A dreadful note of every effort made,
Where life sought life within that shuddering shade.


LIV.

The mother sank beside the father, pale
  And scared; the children her affright partook;
At times they raised the sympathetic wail;
  At times with breathless terror mutely shook.
Williams peered out along the kindling vale;
  No sign of other foe there met his look;
Then with a word that quick return presaged,
He rushed tow'rd where the doubtful contest raged.


LV.

He passed the flame and paused—for on his ear
  There came, with one loud crash, a heavy sound;
He listens still; and silence, sudden, drear,
  Reigns oe'r the glade, and through the gloom profound.
Who is the victim? Evil-boding fear
  Tells him that Waban gasps upon the ground;
One bubbling groan, as if the life-blood gushed;
A shuddering struggle then—and all was hushed.


LVI.

In dire suspense the anxious father stood,
  Yet did he still unmanly terrors quell;
His hand, yet innocent of human blood,
  Now grasped the axe to meet the victor fell;