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en, with loud voice, first Mariantu spoke: Hail we the omen! Spirits of the slain, I hear your voices! Mourn, devoted Spain! Pale-visaged tyrants! still, along our coasts, Shall we despairing mark your iron hosts! Spirits of our brave fathers, curse the race Who thus your name, your memory disgrace! No; though yon mountain's everlasting snows In vain Almagro's[217] toilsome march oppose; 50 Though Atacama's long and wasteful plain Be heaped with blackening carcases in vain; Though still fresh hosts those snowy summits scale, And scare the Llamas with their glittering mail; Though sullen castles lour along our shore; Though our polluted soil be drenched with gore; Insolent tyrants! we, prepared to die, Your arms, your horses, and your gods, defy! He spoke: the warriors stamped upon the ground, And tore the feathers that their foreheads bound. 60 Insolent tyrants! burst the general cry, We, met for vengeance--we, prepared to die, Your arms, your horses, and your gods, defy! Then Teucapel, with warm emotion, cried: This hatchet never yet in blood was dyed; May it be buried deep within my heart, If living from the conflict I depart, Till loud, from shore to shore, is heard one cry, See! in their gore where the last tyrants lie! The Mountain-warrior: Oh, that I could raise 70 The hatchet too, as in my better days, When victor on Maypocha's banks I stood; And while the indignant river rolled in blood, And our swift arrows hissed like rushing rain, I cleft Almagro's iron helm in twain! My strength is well-nigh gone! years marked with woe Have o'er me passed, and bowed my spirit low! Alas, I have no son! Beloved boy, Thy father's last, best hope, his pride, his joy! Oh, hadst thou lived, sole object of my prayers, 80 To guard my waning life, and these gray hairs, How bravely hadst thou now, in manhood's pride, Swung the uplifted war-club by my side! But the Great Spirit willed not! Thou art gone; And, weary, on this earth I walk alone; Thankful if I may yield my latest breath, And bless my country in the pangs of death! With words deliberate, and uplifted hand, Mild to persuade, yet dauntless to command, Raising his hatchet high, Caupolican
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