Textarchiv - Philip Freneau https://www.textarchiv.com/philip-freneau American poet, nationalist, polemicist and newspaper editor. Born January 2, 1752, New York City, New York, United States. Died December 18, 1832, Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States de The Rising Glory Of America https://www.textarchiv.com/philip-freneau/the-rising-glory-of-america <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>Acasto</p> <p>Now shall the adventurous Muse attempt a theme<br /> More new, more noble, and more flush of fame<br /> Than all that went before—<br /> Now through the veil of ancient days renew<br /> The period fam&#039;d when first Columbus touch&#039;d<br /> These shores so long unknown —through various toils;<br /> Famine, and death, the hero forc&#039;d his way,<br /> Thro&#039; oceans pregnant with perpetual storms,<br /> And climates hostile to advent&#039;rous man.<br /> But why, to prompt your tears, should we resume<br /> The tale of Cortez, furious chief, ordain&#039;d<br /> With Indian blood to dye the sands, and choak,<br /> Fam&#039;d Mexico, thy streams with dead? or why<br /> Once more revive the tale so oft rehears&#039;d<br /> Of Atabilipa, by thirst of gold,<br /> (All conquering motive in the human breast)<br /> Depriv&#039;d of life, which not Peru&#039;s rich ore<br /> Nor Mexico&#039;s vast mines could then redeem?<br /> Better these northern realms demand our song,<br /> Design&#039;d by nature for the rural reign,<br /> For agriculture&#039;s toil. —No blood we shed<br /> For metals buried in a rocky waste.——<br /> Curs&#039;d be that ore, which brutal makes our race,<br /> And prompts mankind to shed a brother&#039;s blood!</p> <p>Eugenio. </p> <p>But whence arose<br /> That vagrant race who love the shady vale,<br /> And choose the forest for their dark abode?—<br /> For long has this perplext the sages&#039; skill<br /> To investigate.—Tradition lends no aid<br /> To unveil this secret to the mortal eye,<br /> When first these various nations, north and south,<br /> Possest these shores, or from what countries came. —<br /> Whether they sprang from some primæval head<br /> In their own lands, like Adam in the east, —<br /> Yet this the sacred oracles deny,<br /> And reason, too, reclaims against the thought:<br /> For when the general deluge drown&#039;d the world<br /> Where could their tribes have found security,<br /> Where find their fate, but in the ghastly deep? —<br /> Unless, as others dream, some chosen few<br /> High on the Andes &#039;scap&#039;d the general death,<br /> High on the Andes, wrapt in endless snow,<br /> Where winter in his wildest fury reigns,<br /> And subtile æther scarce our life maintains.<br /> But here philosophers oppose the scheme:<br /> This earth, say they, nor hills nor mountains knew<br /> Ere yet the universal flood prevail&#039;d;<br /> But when the mighty waters rose aloft,<br /> Rous&#039;d by the winds, they shook their solid base,<br /> And, in convulsions, tore the delug&#039;d world,<br /> &#039;Tillby the winds assuag&#039;d, again they fell,<br /> And all their ragged bed expos&#039;d to view.</p> <p>Perhaps, far wandering toward the northern pole,<br /> The streights of Zembla, and the frozen zone,<br /> And where the eastern Greenland almost joins<br /> America&#039;s north point, the hardy tribes<br /> Of banish&#039;d Jews, Siberians, Tartars wild<br /> Came over icy mountains, or on floats<br /> First reach&#039;d these coasts, hid from the world beside. —<br /> And yet another argument more strange,<br /> Reserv&#039;d for men of deeper thought, and late,<br /> Presents itself to view: —In Peleg&#039;sGen. X. 25. days,<br /> (So says the Hebrew seer&#039;s unerring pen)<br /> This mighty mass of earth, this solid globe<br /> Was cleft in twain, —&quot;divided&quot; east and west,<br /> While straight between, the deep Atlantic roll&#039;d. —<br /> And traces indisputable remain<br /> Of this primæval land, now sunk and lost. —<br /> The islands rising in our eastern main<br /> Are but small fragments of this continent,<br /> Whose two extremities were Newfoundland<br /> And St. Helena. —One far in the north,<br /> Where shivering seamen view with strange surprize<br /> The guiding pole-star glittering o&#039;er their heads;<br /> The other near the southern tropic rears<br /> Its head above the waves —Bermuda&#039;s isles,<br /> Cape Verd, Canary, Britain, and the Azores,<br /> With fam&#039;d Hibernia, are but broken parts<br /> Of some prodigious waste, which once sustain&#039;d<br /> Nations and tribes, of vanish&#039;d memory,<br /> Forests, and towns, and beasts of every class,<br /> Where navies now explore their briny way.</p> <p>Leander</p> <p>Your sophistry, Eugenio, makes me smile:<br /> The roving mind of man delights to dwell<br /> On hidden things, merely because they&#039;re hid:<br /> He thinks his knowledge far beyond all limit,<br /> And boldly fathoms Nature&#039;s darkest haunts ——<br /> But for uncertainties, your broken isles,<br /> Your northern Tartars, and your wandering Jews,<br /> (The flimsy cobwebs of a sophist&#039;s brain)<br /> Hear what the voice of history proclaims —<br /> The Carthaginians, ere the Roman yoke<br /> Broke their proud spirits, and enslav&#039;d them too,<br /> For navigation were renown&#039;d as much<br /> As haughty Tyre with all her hundred fleets,<br /> Full many a league their vent&#039;rous seamen sail&#039;d<br /> Thro&#039; streight Gibraltar, down the western shore<br /> Of Africa, to the Canary isles:<br /> By them call&#039;d Fortunate; so FlaccusHor. Epod. 16. sings,<br /> Becaufe eternal spring there clothes the fields<br /> And fruits delicious bloom throughout the year. —<br /> From voyaging here, this inference I draw,<br /> Perhaps some barque with all her numerous crew<br /> Falling to leeward of her destin&#039;d port,<br /> Caught by the eastern Trade, was hurried on<br /> Before the unceasing blast to Indian isles,<br /> Brazil, La Plata, or the coasts more south —<br /> There stranded, and unable to return,<br /> Forever from their native skies estrang&#039;d<br /> Doubtless they made these virgin climes their own,<br /> And in the course of long revolving years<br /> A numerous progeny from these arose,<br /> And spread throughout the coasts —those whom we call<br /> Brazilians, Mexicans, Peruvians rich,<br /> The tribes of Chili, Patagon, and those<br /> Who till the shores of Amazon&#039;s long stream.——<br /> When first the power of Europe here attain&#039;d<br /> Vast empires, kingdoms, cities, palaces<br /> And polish&#039;d nations stock&#039;d the fertile land.<br /> Who has not heard of Cusco, Lima, and<br /> The town of Mexico —huge cities form&#039;d<br /> From Europe&#039;s architecture; ere the arms<br /> Of haughty Spain disturb&#039;d the peaceful soil.——<br /> But here, amid this northern dark domain<br /> No towns were seen to rise. —No arts were here;<br /> The tribes unskill&#039;d to raise the lofty mast,<br /> Or force the daring prow thro&#039; adverse waves,<br /> Gaz&#039;d on the pregnant soil, and crav&#039;d alone<br /> Life from the unaided genius of the ground, —<br /> This indicates they were a different race;<br /> From whom descended, &#039;tis not ours to say —<br /> That power, no doubt, who furnish&#039;d trees, and plants,<br /> And animals to this vast continent,<br /> Spoke into being man among the rest,——<br /> But what a change is here! —what arts arise!<br /> What towns and capitals! how commerce waves<br /> Her gaudy flags, where silence reign&#039;d before!</p> <p>Acasto</p> <p>Speak, my Eugenio, for I&#039;ve heard you tell<br /> The dismal story, and the cause that brought<br /> The first adventurers to these western shores;<br /> The glorious cause that urg&#039;d our fathers first<br /> To visit climes unknown, and wilder woods<br /> Than e&#039; er Tartarian or Norwegian saw,<br /> And with fair culture to adorn a soil<br /> That never felt the industrious swain before.</p> <p>Eugenio</p> <p>All this long story to rehearse, would tire,<br /> Besides, the sun toward the west retreats,<br /> Nor can the noblest theme retard his speed,<br /> Nor loftiest verse —not that which sang the fall<br /> Of Troy divine, and fierce Achilles&#039; ire.<br /> Yet hear a part: —By persecution wrong&#039;d,<br /> And sacerdotal rage, our fathers came<br /> From Europe&#039;s hostile shores to these abodes,<br /> Here to enjoy a liberty in faith,<br /> Secure from tyranny and base controul.<br /> For this they left their country and their friends,<br /> And dar&#039;d the Atlantic wave in quest of peace;<br /> And found new shores, and sylvan settlements,<br /> And men, alike unknowing and unknown.<br /> Hence, by the care of each adventurous chief<br /> New governments (their wealth unenvied yet)<br /> Were form&#039;d on liberty and virtue&#039;s plan.<br /> These searching out uncultivated tracts<br /> Conceiv&#039;d new plans of towns, and capitals,<br /> And spacious provinces —Why should I name<br /> Thee, Penn, the Solon of our western lands;<br /> Sagacious legislator, whom the world<br /> Admires, long dead: an infant colony,<br /> Nurs&#039;d by thy care, now rises o&#039;er the rest<br /> Like that tall Pyramid in Egypt&#039;s waste<br /> O&#039;er all the neighbouring piles, they also great.<br /> Why should I name those heroes so well known,<br /> Who peopled all the rest from Canada<br /> To Georgia&#039;s farthest coasts, West Florida,<br /> Or Apalachian mountains?—Yet what streams<br /> Of blood were shed! what Indian hosts were slain,<br /> Before the days of peace were quite restor&#039;d!</p> <p>Leander</p> <p>Yes, while they overturn&#039;d the rugged soil<br /> And swept the forests from the shaded plain<br /> &#039;Midst dangers, foes, and death, fierce Indian tribes<br /> With vengeful malice arm&#039;d, and black design,<br /> Oft murdered, or dispers&#039;d, these colonies —<br /> Encourag&#039;d, too, by Gallia&#039;s hostile sons,<br /> A warlike race, who late their arms display&#039;d<br /> At Quebec, Montreal, and farthest coasts<br /> Of Labrador, or Cape Breton, where now<br /> The British standard awes the subject host.<br /> Here, those brave chiefs, who, lavish of their blood,<br /> Fought in Britannia&#039;s cause, in battle fell! —<br /> What heart but mourns the untimely fate of Wolfe<br /> Who, dying, conquer&#039;d! —or what breast but beats<br /> To share a fate like his, and die like him!</p> <p>Acasto </p> <p>But why alone commemorate the dead,<br /> And pass those glorious heroes by, who yet<br /> Breathe the same air, and see the light with us? —<br /> The dead, Leander, are but empty names,<br /> And they who fall to-day the same to us<br /> As they who fell ten centuries ago! —<br /> Lost are they all that shin&#039;d on earth before;<br /> Rome&#039;s boldest champions in the dust are laid,<br /> Ajax and great Achilles are no more,<br /> And Philip&#039;s warlike son, an empty shade!——<br /> A WASHINGTON among our sons of fame<br /> We boast conspicuous as the morning star<br /> Among the inferior lights——<br /> To distant wilds Virginia sent him forth —<br /> With her brave sons he gallantly oppos&#039;d<br /> The bold invaders of his country&#039;s rights,<br /> Where wild Ohio pours the mazy flood,<br /> And mighty meadows skirt his subject streams. —<br /> But now, delighting in his elm tree&#039;s shade,<br /> Where deep Potowmac laves the enchanting shore,<br /> He prunes the tender vine, or bids the soil<br /> Luxuriant harvests to the sun display.——</p> <p>Behold a different scene —not thus employ&#039;d<br /> Were Cortez, and Pizarro, pride of Spain,<br /> Whom blood and murder only satisfy&#039;d,<br /> And all to glut their avarice and ambition!——</p> <p>Eugenio</p> <p>Such is the curse, Acasto, where the soul<br /> Humane is wanting —but we boast no feats<br /> Of cruelty like Europe&#039;s murdering breed —<br /> Our milder epithet is merciful,<br /> And each American, true hearted, learns<br /> To conquer, and to spare; for coward souls<br /> Alone seek vengeance on a vanquish&#039;d foe.<br /> Gold, fatal gold, was the alluring bait<br /> To Spain&#039;s rapacious tribes —hence rose the wars<br /> From Chili to the Caribbean sea,<br /> And Montezuma&#039;s Mexican domains:<br /> More blest are we, with whose unenvied soil<br /> Nature decreed no mingling gold to shine,<br /> No flaming diamond, precious emerald,<br /> No blushing sapphire, ruby, chrysolite,<br /> Or jasper red —more noble riches flow<br /> From agriculture, and the industrious swain,<br /> Who tills the fertile vale, or mountain&#039;s brow,<br /> Content to lead a safe, a humble life,<br /> Among his native hills, romantic shades<br /> Such as the muse of Greece of old did feign,<br /> Allur&#039;d the Olympian gods from chrystal skies,<br /> Envying such lovely scenes to mortal man.</p> <p>Leander</p> <p>Long has the rural life been justly fam&#039;d,<br /> And bards of old their pleasing pictures drew<br /> Of flowery meads, and groves, and gliding streams;<br /> Hence, old Arcadia —wood-nymphs, satyrs, fawns;<br /> And hence Elysium, fancied heaven below! —<br /> Fair agriculture, not unworthy kings,<br /> Once exercis&#039;d the royal hand, or those<br /> Whose virtues rais&#039;d them to the rank of gods.<br /> See, old LaertesHom. Odyss. B. 24. in his shepherd weeds<br /> Far from his pompous throne and court august,<br /> Digging the grateful soil, where round him rise<br /> Sons of the earth, the tall aspiring oaks,<br /> Or orchards, boasting of more fertile boughs,<br /> Laden with apples red, sweet scented peach,<br /> Pear, cherry, apricot, or spungy plumb;<br /> While through the glebe the industrious oxen draw<br /> The earth-inverting plough. —Those Romans too,<br /> Fabricius and Camillus, lov&#039;d a life<br /> Of neat simplicity and rustic bliss,<br /> And from the noisy Forum hastening far,<br /> From busy camps, and sycophants, and crowns,<br /> &#039;Midst woods and fields spent the remains of life,<br /> Where full enjoyment still awaits the wise.</p> <p>How grateful, to behold the harvests rise,<br /> And mighty crops adorn the extended plains! —<br /> Fair plenty smiles throughout, while lowing herds<br /> Stalk o&#039;er the shrubby hill or grassy mead,<br /> Or at some shallow river slake their thirst.<br /> The inclosure, now, succeeds the shepherd&#039;s care,<br /> Yet milk-white flocks adorn the well stock&#039;d farm,<br /> And court the attention of the industrious swain —<br /> Their fleece rewards him well; and when the winds<br /> Blow with a keener blast, and from the north<br /> Pour mingled tempests through a sunless sky<br /> (Ice, sleet, and rattling hail) secure he sits<br /> Warm in his cottage, fearless of the storm,<br /> Enjoying now the toils of milder moons,<br /> Yet hoping for the spring.——Such are the joys,<br /> And such the toils of those whom heaven hath bless&#039;d<br /> With souls enamour&#039;d of a country life.</p> <p>Acasto</p> <p>Such are the visions of the rustic reign —<br /> But this alone, the fountain of support,<br /> Would scarce employ the varying mind of man;<br /> Each seeks employ, and each a different way:<br /> Strip Commerce of her sail, and men once more<br /> Would be converted into savages —<br /> No nation e&#039;er grew social and refin&#039;d<br /> &#039;Till Commerce first had wing&#039;d the adventurous prow,<br /> Or sent the slow-pac&#039;d caravan, afar,<br /> To waft their produce to some other clime,<br /> And bring the wish&#039;d exchange —thus came, of old,<br /> Golconda&#039;s golden ore, and thus the wealth<br /> Of Ophir, to the wisest of mankind.</p> <p>Eugenio</p> <p>Great is the praise of Commerce, and the men<br /> Deserve our praise, who spread the undaunted sail,<br /> And traverse every sea —their dangers great,<br /> Death still to combat in the unfeeling gale,<br /> And every billow but a gaping grave: —<br /> There, skies and waters, wearying on the eye,<br /> For weeks and months no other prospect yield<br /> But barren wastes, unfathom&#039;d depths, where not<br /> The blissful haunt of human form is seen<br /> To cheer the unsocial horrors of the way——<br /> Yet all these bold designs to Science owe<br /> Their rise and glory——Hail, fair Science! thou,<br /> Transplanted from the eastern skies, dost bloom<br /> In these blest regions——Greece and Rome no more<br /> Detain the Muses on Cithæron&#039;s brow,<br /> Or old Olympus, crown&#039;d with waving woods,<br /> Or Hæmus&#039; top, where once was heard the harp,<br /> Sweet Orpheus&#039; harp, that gain&#039;d his cause below,<br /> And pierc&#039;d the heart of Orcus and his bride;<br /> That hush&#039;d to silence by its voice divine<br /> Thy melancholy waters, and the gales<br /> O Hebrus! that o&#039;er thy sad surface blow.——<br /> No more the maids round Alpheus&#039; waters stray,<br /> Where he with Arethusa&#039;s stream doth mix,<br /> Or where swift Tiber disembogues his waves<br /> Into the Italian sea, so long unsung;<br /> Hither they wing their way, the last the best<br /> Of countries, where the arts shall rise and grow,<br /> And arms shall have their day —even now we boast<br /> A Franklin, prince of all philosophy,<br /> A genius piercing as the electric fire,<br /> Bright as the lightning&#039;s flash, explain&#039;d so well<br /> By him, the rival of Britannia&#039;s sage.Newton.—<br /> This is the land of every joyous sound,<br /> Of liberty and life, sweet liberty!<br /> Without whose aid the noblest genius fails,<br /> And Science irretrievably must die.</p> <p>Leander</p> <p>But come, Eugenio, since we know the past——<br /> What hinders to pervade with searching eye<br /> The mystic scenes of dark futurity!<br /> Say, shall we ask what empires yet must rise,<br /> What kingdoms, powers and STATES, where now are seen<br /> Mere dreary wastes and awful solitude,<br /> Where Melancholy sits, with eye forlorn,<br /> And time anticipates, when we shall spread<br /> Dominion from the north, and south, and west,<br /> Far from the Atlantic to Pacific shores,<br /> And shackle half the convex of the main!——<br /> A glorious theme! —but how shall mortals dare<br /> To pierce the dark events of future years<br /> And scenes unravel, only known to fate?</p> <p>Acasto</p> <p>This might we do, if warm&#039;d by that bright coal<br /> Snatch&#039;d from the altar of cherubic fire<br /> Which touch&#039;d Isaiah&#039;s lips —or if the spirit<br /> Of Jeremy and Amos, prophets old,<br /> Might swell the heaving breast ——I see, I see<br /> Freedom&#039;s establish&#039;d reign; cities, and men,<br /> Numerous as sands upon the ocean shore,<br /> And empires rising where the sun descends! —<br /> The Ohio soon shall glide by many a town<br /> Of note; and where the Missisippi stream,<br /> By forests shaded, now runs weeping on,<br /> Nations shall grow, and STATES not less in fame<br /> Than Greece and Rome of old!—we too shall boast<br /> Our Scipio&#039;s, Solon&#039;s, Cato&#039;s, sages, chiefs<br /> That in the womb of time yet dormant lie,<br /> Waiting the joyous hour of life and light ——<br /> O snatch me hence, ye muses, to those days<br /> When through the veil of dark antiquity<br /> Our sons shall hear of us as things remote,<br /> That blossom&#039;d in the morn of days ——Alas!<br /> How could I weep that we were born so soon,<br /> Just in the dawning of these mighty times,<br /> Whose scenes are panting for eternity!<br /> Dissentions that shall swell the trump of fame,<br /> And ruin brooding o&#039;er all monarchy!</p> <p>Eugenio</p> <p>Nor shall these angry tumults here subside<br /> Nor murdersThe massacre at Boston, March 5, 1770, is here more particularly glanced at. cease, through all these provinces,<br /> Till foreign crowns have vanish&#039;d from our view<br /> And dazzle here no more——no more presume<br /> To awe the spirit of fair Liberty —<br /> Vengeance shall cut the thread —And Britain, sure,<br /> Will curse her fatal obstinacy for it!<br /> Bent on the ruin of this injur&#039;d country,<br /> She will not listen to our humble prayers,<br /> Though offer&#039;d with submission:<br /> Like vagabonds, and objects of destruction,<br /> Like those whom all mankind are sworn to hate,<br /> She casts us off from her protection,<br /> And will invite the nations round about,<br /> Russians and Germans, slaves and savages,<br /> To come and have a share in our perdition——<br /> O cruel race, O unrelenting Britain,<br /> Who bloody beasts will hire to cut our throats,<br /> Who war will wage with prattling innocence,<br /> And basely murder unoffending women!——<br /> Will stab their prisoners when they cry for quarter,<br /> Will burn our towns, and from his lodging turn<br /> The poor inhabitant to sleep in tempests!——<br /> These will be wrongs, indeed, and all sufficient<br /> To kindle up our souls to deeds of horror,<br /> And give to every arm the nerves of Sampson —<br /> These are the men that fill the world with ruin,<br /> And every region mourns their greedy sway——<br /> Nor only for ambition————<br /> But what are this world&#039;s goods, that they for them<br /> Should exercise perpetual butchery?<br /> What are these mighty riches we possess,<br /> That they should send so far to plunder them?—<br /> Already have we felt their potent arm —<br /> And ever since that inauspicious day,<br /> When first Sir Francis Bernard<br /> His cannons planted at the council door,<br /> And made the assembly room a home for strumpets,<br /> And soldiers rank and file —e&#039;er since that day<br /> This wretched land, that drinks its children&#039;s gore,<br /> Has been a scene of tumult and confusion! —<br /> Are there not evils in the world enough?<br /> Are we so happy that they envy us?<br /> Have we not toil&#039;d to satisfy their harpies,<br /> King&#039;s deputies, that are insatiable;<br /> Whose practice is to incense the royal mind<br /> And make us despicable in his view?<br /> Have we not all the evils to contend with<br /> That, in this life, mankind are subject to,<br /> Pain, sickness, poverty and natural death —<br /> But into every wound that nature gave<br /> They will a dagger plunge, and make them mortal!</p> <p>Leander</p> <p>Enough, enough —such dismal scenes you paint,<br /> I almost shudder at the recollection —<br /> What, are they dogs that they would mangle us? —<br /> Are these the men that come with base design<br /> To rob the hive, and kill the industrious bee! —<br /> To brighter skies I turn my ravish&#039;d view,<br /> And fairer prospects from the future draw —<br /> Here independent power shall hold her sway,<br /> And public virtue warm the patriot breast:<br /> No traces shall remain of tyranny,<br /> And laws, a pattern to the world beside,<br /> Be here enacted first.</p> <p>Acasto</p> <p>And when a train of rolling years are past,<br /> (So sung the exil&#039;d seer in Patmos isle)<br /> A new Jerusalem, sent down from heaven,<br /> Shall grace our happy earth —perhaps this land,<br /> Whose ample breast shall then receive, tho&#039; late,<br /> Myriads of saints, with their immortal king,<br /> To live and reign on earth a thousand years,<br /> Thence called Millennium. Paradise anew<br /> Shall flourish, by no second Adam lost.<br /> No dangerous tree with deadly fruit shall grow,<br /> No tempting serpent to allure the soul<br /> From native innocence.——A Canaan here,<br /> Another Canaan shall excel the old,<br /> And from a fairer Pisgah&#039;s top be seen.<br /> No thistle here, nor thorn, nor briar shall spring,<br /> Earth&#039;s curse before: the lion and the lamb,<br /> In mutual friendship link&#039;d, shall browse the shrub,<br /> And timorous deer with soften&#039;d tygers stray<br /> O&#039;er mead, or lofty hill, or grassy plain:<br /> Another Jordan&#039;s stream shall glide along,<br /> And Siloah&#039;s brook in circling eddies flow:<br /> Groves shall adorn their verdant banks, on which<br /> The happy people, free from toils and death,<br /> Shall find secure repose. No fierce disease,<br /> No fevers, slow consumption, ghastly plague,<br /> (Fate&#039; s ancient ministers) again proclaim<br /> Perpetual war with man: fair fruits shall bloom,<br /> Fair to the eye, and grateful to the taste;<br /> Nature&#039;s loud storms be hush&#039;d, and seas no more<br /> Rage hostile to mankind —and, worse than all,<br /> The fiercer passions of the human breast<br /> Shall kindle up to deeds of death no more,<br /> But all subside in universal peace.——<br /> Such days the world,<br /> And such, AMERICA, thou first shalt have,<br /> When ages, yet to come, have run their round,<br /> And future years of bliss alone remain.</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/philip-freneau" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Philip Freneau</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1771</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/philip-freneau/the-rising-glory-of-america" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="The Rising Glory Of America" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Fri, 07 Apr 2017 20:36:18 +0000 mrbot 7312 at https://www.textarchiv.com