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The Legend Of La Brea[1]

By Charles Kingsley

Topics: classic

Down beside the loathly Pitch Lake,          In the stately Morichal, [2]     Sat an ancient Spanish Indian,          Peering through the columns tall.     Watching vainly for the flashing          Of the jewelled colibris; [3]     Listening vainly for their humming          Round the honey-blossomed trees.     'Few,' he sighed, 'they come, and fewer,          To the cocorite [4] bowers;     Murdered, madly, through the forests          Which of yore were theirs - and ours     By there came a negro hunter,          Lithe and lusty, sleek and strong,     Rolling round his sparkling eyeballs,          As he loped and lounged along.     Rusty firelock on his shoulder;          Rusty cutlass on his thigh;     Never jollier British subject          Rollicked underneath the sky.     British law to give him safety,          British fleets to guard his shore,     And a square of British freehold -          He had all we have, and more.     Fattening through the endless summer,          Like his own provision ground,     He had reached the summum bonum          Which our latest wits have found.     So he thought; and in his hammock          Gnawed his junk of sugar-cane,     Toasted plantains at the fire-stick,          Gnawed, and dozed, and gnawed again.     Had a wife in his ajoupa [5] -          Or, at least, what did instead;     Children, too, who died so early,          He'd no need to earn their bread.     Never stole, save what he needed,          From the Crown woods round about;     Never lied, except when summoned -          Let the warden find him out.     Never drank, except at market;          Never beat his sturdy mate;     She could hit as hard as he could,          And had just as hard a pate.     Had no care for priest nor parson,          Hope of heaven nor fear of hell;     And in all his views of nature          Held with Comte and Peter Bell.     Healthy, happy, silly, kindly,          Neither care nor toil had he,     Save to work an hour at sunrise,          And then hunt the colibri.     Not a bad man; not a good man:          Scarce a man at all, one fears,     If the Man be that within us          Which is born of fire and tears.     Round the palm-stems, round the creepers,          Flashed a feathered jewel past,     Ruby-crested, topaz-throated,          Plucked the cocorite bast,     Plucked the fallen ceiba-cotton, [6]          Whirred away to build his nest,     Hung at last, with happy humming,          Round some flower he fancied best.     Up then went the rusty muzzle,          'Dat de tenth I shot to-day:'     But out sprang the Indian shouting,          Balked the negro of his prey.     'Eh, you Senor Trinidada!          What dis new ondacent plan?     Spoil a genl'man's chance ob shooting?          I as good as any man.     'Dese not your woods; dese de Queen's woods:          You seem not know whar you ar,     Gibbin' yuself dese buckra airs here,          You black Indian Papist!    Dar!'     Stately, courteous, stood the Indian;          Pointed through the palm-tree shade:     'Does the gentleman of colour          Know how yon Pitch Lake was made?'     Grinned the negro, grinned and trembled -          Through his nerves a shudder ran -     Saw a snake-like eye that held him;          Saw - he'd met an Obeah man.     Saw a fetish - such a bottle -          Buried at his cottage door;     Toad and spider, dirty water,          Rusty nails, and nine charms more.     Saw in vision such a cock's head          In the path - and it was white!     Saw Brinvilliers [7] in his pottage:          Faltered, cold and damp with fright.     Fearful is the chance of poison:          Fearful, too, the great unknown:     Magic brings some positivists          Humbly on their marrow-bone.     Like the wedding-guest enchanted,          There he stood, a trembling cur;     While the Indian told his story,          Like the Ancient Mariner.     Told how - 'Once that loathly Pitch Lake          Was a garden bright and fair;     How the Chaymas off the mainland          Built their palm ajoupas there.     'How they throve, and how they fattened,          Hale and happy, safe and strong;     Passed the livelong days in feasting;          Passed the nights in dance and song.     'Till they cruel grew, and wanton:          Till they killed the colibris.     Then outspake the great Good Spirit,          Who can see through all the trees,     'Said - "And what have I not sent you,          Wanton Chaymas, many a year?     Lapp, [8] agouti, [9] cachicame, [10]          Quenc [11] and guazu-pita deer.     '"Fish I sent you, sent you turtle,          Chip-chip, [12] conch, flamingo red,     Woodland paui, [13] horned screamer, [14]          And blue ramier [15] overhead.     '"Plums from balata [16] and mombin, [17]          Tania, [18] manioc, [19] water-vine; [20]     Let you fell my slim manacques, [21]          Tap my sweet moriche wine. [22]     '"Sent rich plantains, [23] food of angels;          Rich ananas, [24] food of kings;     Grudged you none of all my treasures:          Save these lovely useless things."     'But the Chaymas' ears were deafened;          Blind their eyes, and could not see     How a blissful Indian's spirit          Lived in every colibri.     'Lived, forgetting toil and sorrow,          Ever fair and ever new;     Whirring round the dear old woodland,          Feeding on the honey-dew.     'Till one evening roared the earthquake:          Monkeys howled, and parrots screamed:     And the Guaraons at morning          Gathered here, as men who dreamed.     'Sunk were gardens, sunk ajoupas;          Hut and hammock, man and hound:     And above the Chayma village          Boiled with pitch the cursed ground.     'Full, and too full; safe, and too safe;          Negro man, take care, take care.     He that wantons with God's bounties          Of God's wrath had best beware.     'For the saucy, reckless, heartless,          Evil days are sure in store.     You may see the Negro sinking          As the Chayma sank of yore.'     Loudly laughed that stalwart hunter -          'Eh, what superstitious talk!     Nyam [25] am nyam, an' maney maney;          Birds am birds, like park am park;     An' dere's twenty thousand birdskins          Ardered jes' now fram New Yark.'     Eversley, 1870.

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"Down beside the loathly Pitch Lake,..."

This evocative piece by Charles Kingsley, titled "The Legend Of La Brea[1]", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:Charles Kingsley

"Down beside the loathly Pitch Lake,..." by Charles Kingsley

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Charles Kingsley

About Charles Kingsley

Charles Kingsley (1819–1875) was an English novelist, historian, and poet whose poem "The Three Fishers" and children's book "The Water-Babies" are Victorian classics. He was also a social reformer and advocate for "Christian Socialism."

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