The American experiment with liberty has been under fire since its creation. The following is an excerpt from a curious little pre-Civil War publication called "Stephen H. Branch's Alligator." Mr. Branch announces that he has reluctantly concluded he must leave his homeland, in view of the alarming political developments. After a lot of fire and brimstone, he suddenly closes in a calmer mood:
Go on, then, ye
fanatics and devils of all sections, to your hearts'
content, in your apostacy to the living and departed patriots of your distracted and divided country.
Stop not until your wives and children run wild
through streets and fields of blood, and this whole
land is a pile of bleeding and burning ruins. Go
on ye incarnate fiends in your bloody enterprise,
until the mounds of your fathers are divested of
their fragrant verdure, and are trampled by foreign
marauders, who wildly gloat over your impending
suicide. An irresistible horde of demagogues and
vampires, and fanatics and lunatics, are at the
throats of the American patriots, and threaten
them with strangulation and utter annihilation.
Go on, then, ye demons of hell, and tear to fragments
the glorious Constitution that was created
by Washington, Greene, Jefferson, Madison, Hamilton,
Warren, Franklin, Adams, Lafayette and
Kosciusko, and nobly defended by Jackson, Perry,
Taylor, Webster, Clay, Calhoun, Harrison, Grogan,
Decatur, (and the living Scott), whose sighs and
tears, and expiring energies, were consecrated to
its eternal duration. Go on, then, ye slimy vultures,
in your ruthless desecration of their graves,
until despotic soldiers line our streets and frontiers,
and stab the patriots who breathe the enchanting
word of liberty. Go on, I say, in your inhuman
sacrilege, but I will fly to Switzerland, in whose
deep mountain glades I will strive to efface that I
was born and reared among the gang of consummate
fools and knaves who now level their rifles
at the race of noble birds that have graced the
American skies for nearly a hundred years. Go
on, then, ye dastard traitors, in your bloody demolition,
but I will go and live and die in the land of
William Tell, whose fair posterity evince a
purer fidelity to their remotest ancestors, than
those pernicious monsters whose infernal madness
will soon surrender the bones of Washington and
Jackson to the despots of Europe, whose shafts
they foiled, until they went down, with tottering
footsteps, into their immortal graves. Farewell,
then, ye crazy parricides--farewell, ye Burrs and
Arnolds--and when you have consigned your deluded
countrymen to all the horrors of anarchy and
eternal despotism, think of the humble admonitions
of one who, rather than behold the downfall of
his beautiful and glorious country, sought peace,
and succor, and a mausoleum in the mountains of
Switzerland, once traversed by William Tell and
his gallant archers, who created a love of liberty
that has survived the flight of centuries, and which
can never be subdued by foes without, nor fools
within, her borders. In my voluntary exile, I will
implore God to visit you with His displeasure,
through the withering curses of your children, and
their posterity to the remotest age, for destroying
the liberties of their country, which you should
bequeathe to them as they came to you from your
illustrious fathers, whose sacred and silent ashes
you dare not visit and contemplate at this fearful
crisis, amid the pure and tranquil solitudes of the
patriotic dead lest the memory of their heroic
deeds and sacrifice should remind you of your hellish
treason, and paralyze your hearts, and smite
your worthless bodies to the dust, and consign your
pallid livers to undying torture. Although these
admonitions are inscribed in tones of burning scorn,
yet they emanate from a bosom that glows with
love for my bewildered countrymen. And my last
request is, that every patriotic father will gather
his little flock around him at evening shades, and
read this parting admonition in a clear and feeling
voice, and then kneel before the God of nations, and
implore Him to preserve their liberties, with a
blessing on the humble author of this production,
in his unhappy seclusion in a distant land. I would
write more, but gushing tears blind my vision, and
swell my heart with dying emotions.
Affectionately,
Stephen H. Branch.
New York, May 30, 1856
Later, he offers this theory of his fiery nature:
And if, in the morning of life, we do not reflect Vesuvius in our eyes, and belch lava and brimstone from our mouths, we seldom effect much in the great scuffle of life, and go down to our graves with Miss Nancy inscribed at the head and tail of our grassy mounds.
Man, like a horse, must have mettle, and plenty of it, with an immense bottom, or he cannot expect to contend with the fiery steeds of the turf and the forum. And, above all, a man must have a crop or two of worms at 40. All men have more worms in their bellies than they are aware of, (or their physicians, either,) and some have quarts.
2 comments:
"Affectionately" is a nice touch.
That was my favorite part, too.
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