D'Ri and I eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about D'Ri and I.

D'Ri and I eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about D'Ri and I.

President Monroe is coming on the woods-pike, and veterans are drawn up in line to meet him.  Here are men who fought at Chippewa and Lundy’s Lane and Lake Erie and Chrysler’s Farm, and here are some old chaps who fought long before at Plattsburg and Ticonderoga.  Joseph Bonaparte, the ex-king of Spain, so like his mighty brother at St. Helena, is passing the line.  He steps proudly, in ruffles and green velvet.  Gondolas with liveried gondoliers, and filled with fair women, are floating on the still lake, now rich with shadow-pictures of wood and sky and rocky shore.

A burst of melody rings in the great harp of the woodland.  In that trumpet peal, it seems, a million voices sing:—­

  Hail, Columbia, happy land!

Slowly the line begins to limp along.  There are wooden legs and crutches and empty sleeves in that column.  D’ri goes limping in front, his right leg gone at the knee since our last charge.  Draped around him is that old battle-flag of the Lawrence.  I march beside him, with only this long seam across my check to show that I had been with him that bloody day at Chrysler’s.  We move slowly over a green field to the edge of the forest.  There, in the cool shadow, are ladies in white, and long tables set for a feast.  My dear wife, loved of all and more beautiful than ever, comes to meet us.

“Sweetheart,” she whispers, “I was never so proud to be your wife.”

“And an American,” I suggest, kissing her.

“And an American,” she answers.

A bugle sounds; the cavalcade is coming.

“The President!” they cry, and we all begin cheering.

He leads the escort on a black horse, a fine figure in military coat and white trousers, his cocked hat in hand, a smile lighting his face.  The count receives him and speaks our welcome.  President Monroe looks down the war-scarred line a moment.  His eyes fill with tears, and then he speaks to us.

“Sons of the woodsmen,” says he, concluding his remarks, “you shall live in the history of a greater land than that we now behold or dream of, and in the gratitude of generations yet unborn, long, long after we are turned to dust.”

And then we all sing loudly with full hearts: 

  O land I love!—­thy acres sown
  With sweat and blood and shattered bone—­
  God’s grain, that ever doth increase
  The goodly harvest of his peace.

THE END

[Transcriber’s note — the following material is the Lilypond (www.lilypond.org) source for the song found earlier in this e-book.  Search for the word “roundelay”.  Thanks to Dave Maddock for its preparation.]

\version “2.0.1”

melody = \notes \relative c’ {
  \key e \major
  \time 4/4

  \autoBeamOff

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
D'Ri and I from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.