Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Meeting of the Susquehanna and the Lackawanna
By Lydia Huntley Sigourney (17911865)R
To claim the hand of thy promised bride;
She doth haste from the realm of the darkened mine,
To mingle her murmured vows with thine;
Ye have met,—ye have met, and the shores prolong
The liquid notes of your nuptial song.
And the child of the Indian king have done;
I saw thy bride, as she strove in vain,
To cleanse her brow from the carbon stain,
But she brings thee a dowry so rich and true
That thy love must not shrink from the tawny hue.
And her infant freaks there are none to tell;
The path of her beauty was wild and free,
And in dell and forest she hid from thee;
But the day of her fond caprice is o’er,
And she seeks to part from thy breast no more.
Through the land where the blessed Miquon died;
No red man’s blood with its guilty stain
Hath cried unto God from that broad domain,—
With the seeds of peace they have sown the soil,
Bring a harvest of wealth for their hour of toil.
Where the waving foliage is rich and deep;
I have stood on the mountain and roamed through the glen
To the beautiful homes of the western men;
Yet naught in that realm of enchantment could see,
So fair as the vale of Wyoming to me.