BY MRS. PENNY.
ANNINGAIT AND AJUTT.
[82]LOve, powerful Love, each being can controul,
Brighten the mind, and animate the ſoul:
Love can, with truth, the mighty magic boaſt,
Of ſacred warmth amidſt eternal froſt;
Witneſs fair Ajutt, pride of icy plains,
Where darkneſs half the year triumphant reigns,
And faithful, generous Anningait, the youth,
By Love taught ſoftneſs, by that ſoftneſs truth:
Both flouriſh'd ſweet on Greenland's rigid coaſt,
Pure as their ſnow, and conſtant as their froſt;
No poliſh'd arts of ſpecious vice they knew,
The youth was noble, and the maid was true;
From earlieſt dawn their charms no rival ſaw,
By nature bleſt beyond her uſual law;
No Greenland ſwain like Anningait could dare,
To fix th' harpoon, or rouſe the whale to war;
From his firm hand the unerring javelin flew,
His bark ſure loaded by the ſeal he ſlew;
Bleſt in his friends, illuſtrious was his race,
Grac'd by his birth, his birth his actions grace.
'Twas at a ſolemn feaſt in Greenland held,
Where beauteous Ajutt every nymph excell'd,
That Anningait firſt ſaw the blooming fair,
With modeſt ſenſe, and unaffected air;
[83]He gaz'd with rapture! Ajutt did the ſame!
Their ſouls, congenial, caught the riſing flame;
On her alone he fix'd his firm regard,
The choiceſt whale was to her board preferr'd;
A ſpotleſs ermine (emblem of her mind)
To deck her ſhoulders he from his reſign'd;
With theſe a gift of greater prize beſtow'd,
A heart all her's, a heart ſupremely good:
To ſing her charms his artleſs voice was fir'd,
Hence flow'd the lay which love and ſhe inſpir'd.
' Ajutt, more beauteous than the willow's ſhade,
' Fragrant as mountain-thyme, inchanting maid,
' Whoſe taper fingers white and poliſh'd are,
' As morſe's teeth, and nimble as the hare;
' Thy ſmiles as grateful as diſſolving ſnow,
' When welcome ſunſhine bids our lakes to flow;
' Far as e'er thought can trace I'd thee purſue,
' And be thy guardian and thy lover too;
' No power ſhall Ajutt from her love divide,
' Nor midland cliffs, nor eaſtern caverns hide;
' Not the malignant genius of the rock,
' Our foe avow'd, rapacious Amarock,
' Should from my faithful arm my Ajutt tear,
' That arm unwearied ſhould protect my fair;
' Even Haffgufa, the fear of every maid,
' I'd dauntleſs meet, nor once his proweſs dread;
' Be kind then, Ajutt, and my paſſion try,
' Who lives but in thy ſmile, without thy ſmile muſt die;
[84]' And may that wretch, if ſuch a wretch there be,
' Who blaſts our union, or dare envy me,
' Be in his icy bed for ever laid,
' Without his bow, nor wept by faithful maid;
' And in the laud of ſouls, when he arrives,
' And new to life in that dread clime revives,
' May then his ſcull the burning drops receive
' From ſtarry lamps, nor other gift relieve;
' For ſure, by fate, fair Ajutt muſt be mine,
' Pure is my paſſion, and my flame divine.'
Th' attentive fiſhers, Greenland's choiceſt ſwains,
Enraptur'd, liſten and approve his ſtrains;
The nymphs on Ajutt caſt an envious eye,
And wiſh their fate with ſuch a ſwain to try;
While ſhe, tho' pleas'd, conceals the ſoft regard,
And beauty's power exerts to be the more rever'd.
But now, long abſent Sol, the god of day,
Began his beams on ſparkling froſt to play;
The ſnow diſſolves, long ſtagnant waters riſe,
A new creation ſeems to greet their eyes;
The Greenland youths the happy omen hail,
Prepare for combat with the mighty whale;
With active ardor all renew their toil,
And count in thought the treaſures of their oil;
Foremoſt in all ſee Anningait appear,
For lovely Ajutt deigns the toil to ſhare;
Her preſence animates the hero's mind,
He ruſh'd on danger fleeter than the wind;
[85]With agile arm th' aſtoniſh'd ſea-horſe ſtruck,
And drew him, panting, on his well-fix'd hook;
In utmoſt depths the diving ſeal purſued,
And pierc'd th' emerging whale, with ſinewy ſtrength endued;
And when, with loaded bark, to land they ſteer,
With active ſkill he caught the dappled deer;
Their gloſſy ſkins he dreſt to deck his bride,
But hope and anxious fear his breaſt divide;
For ſtill fair Ajutt further proof demands,
Ere-nuptial rites ſhould join their plighted hands;
To diſtant ſhores commands the youth to rove,
To find if abſence could abate his love;
Bad him in ſearch of wandering whales to roam,
To crown their board when winter call'd him home;
He muſt comply—implicit he obeys,
Her will his law—what more a lover ſways?—
Yet, ere he went, her tent with flowers he ſtrews,
Refreſh'd with ſweeteſt of the Iceland dews;
Balmy as Ajutt's breath, the new-born flowers
Might boaſt of fragrance with Arcadian bowers;
Theſe as he ſtrew'd, to Ajutt thus he ſaid,
' Attend—and mark—inexorable maid:
' See in theſe bloſſoms beauty's ſhort-liv'd power,
' Beauty as fading as the morning flower;
' This hour preſents them lovely to thy view,
' Impearl'd with fragrance, deck'd in orient dew;
' Another comes, no more they cheer thine eye,
' And ere a third revolves, they droop and die;
[86]' Such, my lov'd Ajutt, is the life we boaſt,
' A tranſient dream which ere enjoy'd is loſt:
' Why wilt thou then enforce thy harſh command,
' And drive me wretched to the diſtant ſtrand?
' Why wilt thou not my plighted vow receive,
' And be my partner on the boiſterous wave?
' Then could I fearleſs every danger try,
' What danger can I dread when Ajutt's by?
' O! virgin, beauteous as the ſunny beam,
' Which glittering dances on the limpid ſtream,
' Once more reflect—recall the ſad decree,
' Be juſt to Ajutt, and be kind to me;
' Think, ere I go, what froſts, what fogs may riſe,
' And, join'd, preclude thy preſence from my eyes;
' Thou know'ſt, my fair, our clime, condemn'd to froſt,
' Of days and nights alternate cannot boaſt,
' Like thoſe gay climes by lying ſtrangers told,
' Where houſes ſcreen them from inclement cold;
' Ere my return dread winter's bird may ſing,
' And night o'ertake me with an eagle's wing;
' What then in thoſe lone months can cheer my ſoul?
' Not ſeal, delicious, nor the flowing bowl;
' The flaming lamps without thy eyes would fade,
' Nor healing oil could cure the wound they made.'
In vain the youth his utmoſt art eſſay'd,
Perſuaſion mov'd not, nor ſoft pity ſway'd,
Perverſly fix'd, he found the cruel maid:
[87]But ere he went, his laſt reſpect to ſhow,
Seven ermine ſkins, that rival'd Greenland's ſnow,
With five fair ſwans, he as a tribute gave,
And ſeals freſh bleeding from the briny wave,
With marble lamps, and oil of curious taſte,
To deck her board, and crown the rich repaſt:
With joy refin'd, this gift the nymph receiv'd,
As proof of love, from him in whom ſhe liv'd;
Then trembling wiſh'd the parting pang was o'er,
While pitying ſighs her love-lorn baſom tore.
The ready boat the tardy youth upbraids,
And frequent ſummons from the rowing maids—
' I come, he cries—my Ajutt lov'd adieu—
' Forget me not, my fair,—be juſt—be true.'
The words, by grief, half frozen on his tongue,
He ſigh'd—ſhe wept—and on his boſom hung;
Then vow'd unchanging love, and fervent pray'd
The powers to guard him for his faithful maid;
And that no mermaid, ſyren of the deep,
Might ſnatch her love, or give her cauſe to weep;
With ſorrow, tender as the conſtant dove,
Who mourns the tedious abſence of her love,
Did Anningait his lovely Ajutt leave,
And from her wiſh his only joy receive:
With her's, his own he joins, and prays each power,
To guard his maid, and haſle their nuptial hour;
Then onward moves—now looks a laſt adieu,
While tender eloquence his cheeks bedew;
[88]Thrice he attempts his floating bark to leave,
And ſwim to Ajutt o'er the daſhing wave;
Like ſome fair image Ajutt lifeleſs ſtands,
Surveys his boat, and marks the printed ſands;
Till waves and rocks her proſpect intercept,
Her hut then ſought, and there in private wept;
But, rous'd by hope of Anningait's return,
Each female art ſhe tries in various turn;
One hour the greeneſt moſs ſhe culls with care,
And dries the graſs for Anningait to wear;
Of ſofteſt ſkins a fiſhing coat ſhe wrought,
Of curious form, like him of whom ſhe thought;
A boat of tougheſt ſkins together ſew'd,
And as ſhe work'd each tender vow renew'd;
Then in ſoft numbers each good genius prays,
To guide her ſwain thro' Terror's pathleſs ways;
And that his nervous arms might ſtronger prove,
Than the fierce bear, nor aught annoy her love;
That his ſwift darts unerring he might guide,
That his tough boat might bravely ſtem the tide;
That the crack'd ice might ne'er his feet betray,
Nor his harpoon might ever fail the prey.
Thus in lone ſadneſs Ajutt ſtill remains,
Nor joins the maidens on the jocund plains;
Her locks unbraided o'er her ſhoulders flow,
In beauteous negligence, and pomp of woe;
Their rural ſports ſhe now no more adorns,
Nor thinks of joy till Anningait returns;
[89]While he, by calms detain'd, or tempeſt toſt,
Vainly attemps to reach the deſtin'd coaſt,
Baniſh'd from Ajutt all his joys are loſt,
Sighing he ſtands, and views the ruffled main,
And thus to life compares the varied ſcene.
' O! frail, uncertain ſtate, where ſhall we find
' A truer emblem of the human mind,
' Than in the floating ice, by billows toſt,
' It towers on high, there ſparkles and is loſt;
' The ſun-beams, bright, diſſolve the glittering toy,
' And rocks, below, their hidden power employ;
' Each cauſe concurs this certain truth to prove,
' No joys are permanent but thoſe above:
' What art thou, Pleaſure! fleeting as a dream!
' Which ſudden blazes like a northern gleam,
' That plays a moment on our dazled eyes,
' Then palls, and fades, and in an inſtant dies:
' What art thou Love! the whirlpool of our reſt!
' The fatal eddy of the human breaſt;
' The ſoft ſenſation, that unſeen obtains
' Such ſovereign ſway, ſoon abſolute it reigns:
' Had not my eyes thy charms, O Ajutt! trac'd,
' The ſweet expreſſions that thy perſon grac'd;
' The winning ſoftneſs, and th' attracting mien,
' Which conſcious ſpoke the Graces dwelt within,
' Then had I ſtill with downy eaſe been bleſt,
' Slept like the careleſs morſe in vacant reſt,
[90]' Joyous as minſtrels in the ſtarry ſphere,
' Had felt no grief, a ſtranger ſtill to care:
' But, if my lovely fair will true remain,
' How light each toil, and overpaid each pain;
' That ſweet reflection ſhall my peace reſtore,
' She's juſt as fair, and we ſhall part no more:
' That thought, my Ajutt, ſhall my nerves new-brace,
' I'll hunt the raindeer to the utmoſt chace;
' A few weeks paſt, then loaded I'll return,
' And Love's pure flame for us ſhall grateful burn;
' Roefiſh and porpoiſe ſhall thy kindred feaſt,
' And thou ſhalt ſmile on every friendly gueſt;
' The fox and hare ſhall Ajutt's couch enfold,
' And ſeals tough ſkins ſhall ſcreen thee from the cold;
' The marble lamps with ſweeteſt oil I'll fill,
' To light thy tent, and fragrant fumes diſtill;
' Haſte then, O time! add ſwiftneſs to thy flight,
' For, without Ajutt, horrid were the night.'
Thus was the youth alternate captive led,
By ſmiling Hope, Diſmay, and anxious Dread;
Till rous'd by ſpouting whales his ardour glows,
He with new courage to the combat goes;
Ajutt, a ſweet recluſe from all ſhe lov'd,
Retirement wooed, by ſocial joys unmov'd;
True to her love as is th' attracted ſteel,
In thought feels every woe that he might feel.
Once as ſhe ſtray'd, by gentle labour led,
Drying ſoft ſkins to deck her lover's bed;
[91]Nornſuck, a mighty chief among their ſwains,
Return'd from hunting on the diſtant plains;
The maid he raptur'd views, with ſo [...]t ſurprize,
And falls a victim to her conquering eyes;
Fair without gaudy pomp, or ſtudied art,
Her native beauty ſtruck the hero's heart;
By Love o'er-awed, whoſe power he now firſt knew,
Speechleſs he gaz'd, and wiſt not what to do;
But ready Hope her healing ſuccour ſends,
And bids him gain the fair-one by her friends;
For much he fear'd his ſuit to Ajutt vain,
Yet bleſs'd the abſence of her favour'd ſwain;
Revolves with joy his birth and mighty ſtore,
For great his wealth, no Greenland ſwain had more;
With theſe reſolves her parents faith to try,
And hopes their power might win her to comply;
Yet firſt preſumes his paſſion to diſcloſe,
And o'er her neck a dappled deer-ſkin throws;
This with diſdain the faithful maid returns,
And then for Anningait a-freſh ſhe mourns:
Her father's diſtant hutt he inſtant ſought,
His worth explain'd, and every tender thought,
Which ſoon their ſordid minds to his opinion wrought.
Home when the maid returns, with artful tale,
They praiſe young Nornſuck, hero of the vale;
His power, his wealth, they ſet in dazzling light,
His vaſt poſſeſſions for th' approaching night;
[92]How bright his form (for true the youth was fair)
In graceful ringlets flow'd his jetty hair,
His perſon pleaſing, and quick piercing eye,
That might for brightneſs with the eagle's vie;
His ardent paſſion crown'd the irkſome tale,
But vain each art that dar'd her truth aſſail;
With ſilent ſcorn th' amazing change ſhe hears,
That they forget her vow and daily tears;
At laſt, long urg'd, ſhe painful ſilence broke,
And thus her ſentiments in anguiſh ſpoke:
' Sooner ſhall whales their liquid world forſake,
' And ſeek for paſtime in the half froze lake;
' Sooner ſhall endleſs night o'er Greenland reign,
' And cheering ſun-ſhine never gild the plain,
' Than I in thought or word my love forego,
' Fix'd as my native froſt, unblemiſh'd as my ſnow.'
Then ſwift as bounding hart away ſhe fled,
And travers'd hill or dale as fancy led;
Firmly reſolv'd the hutt to ſee no more,
Till Anningait arriv'd on Greenland's ſhore;
A willing exile from her father's board,
Her wants ſupplied from Nature's varied hoard;
She oft high cliffs aſcends, and eager eyes
The diſtant main in curling billows riſe;
Each time new hope her anxious boſom cheers,
Nay more than hope, for now the boat appears;
[93]The wiſh'd for bark in loaded pomp returns,
Wild with the joy no longer now ſhe mourns,
But darts with rapid eaſe o'er hill and dale,
Now ſcours the plain, or ſkims along the vale;
Till faint with joy ſhe gains the pebbled ſhore,
And hails the bark, and hears the daſhing oar;
Then with loud rapture calls her deſtin'd mate,
Her life, her lord, her much-lov'd Anningait;
But the glad ſounds no Anningait repays,
Trembling ſhe wonders at th' unkind delays;
Eager the cruel reaſon ſhe demands,
When drop the oars from each one's nerveleſs hands;
Aghaſt they gaze, as Anningait ſhe calls,
Nor know what fate the hapleſs ſwain befalls;
The youth impatient long before was gone,
In a ſwift boat unloaded and alone;
Their tedious voyage Love could not approve,
That ſo long kept him from expecting Love;
But how, or where he was, they knew no more,
Than ſhe, juſt lifeleſs, on the crouded ſhore;
With horror ſtruck, immoveable ſhe ſtands,
And wets, with copious tears, the thirſty ſands;
The virgin train in ſocial woe attend,
And all bewail the anguiſh of their friend;
Her kindred round now mourn, then ſooth her woes,
And from each friendly tongue perſuaſion-flows;
[94]They try to win her home, and calm her mind,
But ſhe was deaf as rocks, and heedleſs as the wind;
With gentle force, at laſt, they brought her there,
And ſeek each lenitive to ſooth her care;
Then her ſoft couch with ſleekeſt ſkins they ſpread,
And lead her gently to her long-left bed;
Then pray'd the downy god to ſeal her eyes,
And that ſweet Peace again might with her riſe;
She thankful heard, but knew their wiſh was vain,
From Anningait, thus torn, all life was pain;
Yet lulls her grief with ſad reflection's power,
That forth unheeded in the ſilent hour,
When the ſoft deity their pillows ſtrew'd,
And in ſweet ſlumber every ſenſe ſubdued,
She might with ſafety gain the late-left ſhore,
And for her love each terror would explore:
With double pain th' unwilling moments fly,
Till all was huſh'd, and clos'd was every eye;
Then inſtant quits her once lov'd place of reſt,
Where Peace long dwelt, tho' now no more a gueſt;
Softly ſhe ſtole her ſleeping friends to view,
And look'd, and ſigh'd, a tender, laſt adieu;
Now filial tenderneſs her boſom tore,
That thoſe dear objects ſhe might ſee no more:
But what, O! Nature, are thy feebler ties?
When Love inſpires, thy ſweet ſenſation flies;—
[95]Her fear-wing'd feet the diſtant ſhore ſoon gain,
Seize the firſt boat, then boldly plough the main;
Nor more her native Greenland ever trod—
Nor yet the youth—Some think an angry god,
The potent genius of the floods and rock,
Fierce Haffgufa, or dreaded Amarock,
Detain'd them priſoners in their coral caves,
Whoſe pearly pavements ſhine thro' lucid waves;
Others, with kinder hope, this truth declare,
That chang'd to ſtars they grace the hemiſphere.