“The Earthquake”

Authors

Date

3-10-1812

Newspaper

Charleston Courier

Page and Column

Page 3, Column 1

Newspaper Location

Charleston, South Carolina

Serial Number

356

Abstract

Poem about the earthquakes.

Transcript

THE EARTHQUAKE. STILL was the hour-The Moon drove high, Her cloudless course along the sky; The winds were hush'd-no zepher's sigh Breath'd o'er the deep tranquility. What awful stillness reigns around; >br>Nature seems sunk in sleep profound; What sudden trembling moves the ground! What shakes the world thus fearfully! Earth's bosom seems with pain to swell- What wand'ring spirit strikes that bell*? Nature, is this thy funeral knell? My soul, is this eternity? Behold! The mighty mountains nod. As when on Sinai's summit trod The footsteps of the eternal GOD; When he unveil'd his majesty! How dread the thunder's awful roll, That shakes the earth from pole to pole! What power can thus convulse the whole? Can it be less than Deity? Tempests and fires; whirlwinds and storms/ Comets and earthquakes--dire alarms, Distinctly cry, fly not do arms! THE WARNING HEED COLUMBIANS. At Charleston, S.C. the bells in the Churches. The Gleaner.

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