Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of William Cullen Bryant > Text of Murdered Traveller
A poem by William Cullen Bryant |
||
The Murdered Traveller |
||
________________________________________________
Title: The Murdered Traveller Author: William Cullen Bryant [More Titles by Bryant] When spring, to woods and wastes around, The fragrant birch, above him, hung The red-bird warbled, as he wrought But there was weeping far away, They little knew, who loved him so, Nor how, when round the frosty pole Nor how, when strangers found his bones, But long they looked, and feared, and wept, Long, long they looked--but never spied
[Note: Some years since, in the month of May, the remains of a human body, partly devoured by wild animals, were found in a woody ravine, near a solitary road passing between the mountains west of the village of Stockbridge. It was supposed that the person came to his death by violence, but no traces could be discovered of his murderers. It was only recollected that one evening, in the course of the previous winter, a traveller had stopped at an inn in the village of West Stockbridge; that he had inquired the way to Stockbridge; and that, in paying the innkeeper for something he had ordered, it appeared that he had a considerable sum of money in his possession. Two ill-looking men were present, and went out about the same time that the traveller proceeded on his journey. During the winter, also, two men of shabby appearance, but plentifully supplied with money, had lingered for awhile about the village of Stockbridge. Several years afterward, a criminal, about to be executed for a capital offence in Canada, confessed that he had been concerned in murdering a traveller in Stockbridge for the sake of his money. Nothing was ever discovered respecting the name or residence of the person murdered.] [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |