The Scenery and Game of Wyoming Territory, by Isaac McLellan

The Scenery and Game of Wyoming Territory

Twilight silently, softly falls,
Touching valley and grove with misty wand,
Kissing the sky goodnight at the west;
From far-off peaks of the mountain-land.
All nature slumbers in perfect rest,
Sweet sleep the earth enfolds.
Night lures to soft Elysian dreams,
And far and wide dominion holds;
No sound invades save distant wail
Of coyote from the upland steep,
Or gentle tinkle of a brook
In rocky butte or cañ on deep.   And here in this Sweet-Water vale,
How pleasant the passing years should flow;
A vale engirdled by Rocky Peak,
A grand, majestic show!
Far off the Big Horn Mountains swell,
Where gallant Custer fought and fell,
Where buffalo-grass and wild grease-wood
Have redden'd oft with human blood.   Here on these measureless green plains,
The wild deer stretch away at speed.
The prong-horn'd antelopes abound,
The lordly elk herds range and feed;
But, ah, the buffalo that swept
These wastes a score of years ago,
These grazing-grounds of pastures vast,
Have vanish'd like last year's snow!
No more the whooping Indian spurs
In frantic gallop on their trail;
No more the hunter-troops pursue
The fleeing herds in gulch and vale;
No more their bellowing onsets sound,
As in fierce combat they engage;
No more with hoof they spurn the ground,
Tossing their iron horns in rage.   So here for ages was the scene,
The battle-ground of savage strife,
Long ere the emigrants had come
To brave the battle-axe and knife.
Here o'er these grassy meads they swept,
Hunting the bison and the deer;
Rejoicing in the war and chase,
In forays of their fierce career,
With war club, arrow-shaft, and spear.

poems.one - Isaac McLellan

Isaac McLellan