Part 7 (1/2)
Would thou wert England's Nature, Bard Supreme, To fas.h.i.+on kings and lordlings fit to rule; They would be flesh and blood, not fiend and ghoul; And would thou wert her Sun, that every beam Might not, for tally, show a youth's blood-pool, Choking blithe Spring, as, now, to earth's extreme.
ENGLAND'S RIGHTEOUSNESS
The righteousness of England! ”Tis to kneel Full weight on weaker nations, and entone Hosannas louder than the victims groan; Then, stooping, drink their blood with gulps of zeal.”
What right have wounds, though wide, to throb, or feel?
'Tis blasphemy to England's crimson throne.
Knee-deep in Erin's blood, she mocks Christ's moan: Forgive them, Lord! they know not their true weal.
”Whose is the fault? Tis not my arrogance, But candor, Lord, that puts the blame on Thee.
What right hadst Thou to make these people free And let all nature prompt them to advance?-- Oh, no such blunder, Lord, hadst Thou called me, Instead of Wisdom, to approve Thy plans!”
THE Ma.s.sACRE OF THE WELSH MINERS
The Bard's curse: ”Ruin seize thee Ruthless King,”
Took bat-like form for hollow echo-flight.
Though stoned and lanced at, when, at fall of night, It darted forth with ghastly--spreading wing, It found in fresh, wide, royal ravis.h.i.+ng, New hollows, dark with horror and sad plight, To dash in and live on. Oh, to my sight, How grows its grimness, while eternaling!
Deep are the minds of Wales, but far more deep The horror, gulfed out by McCreedy, firing On men defenseless and, through want, expiring.
Oh, from that gulf the Bard's curse makes a sweep Up to the Sun and, from its long desiring, Grown eagle, shrieks to heaven from steep to step!
A DIRTY WORK
”A dirty work,” said Dyer, rebuked for spilling Hundreds of lives to irrigate new lands.
A dirty work, but not for British hands, Dabbling in blood to earn each day their s.h.i.+lling.
Hark! Mohawk Valley and Wyoming, chilling With thought of Tarleton's King-serving bands, And Canada red-clayed, though high snow stands, Cry: Work for which the British are too willing!
Invaded lands need terror irrigation To make them fruitful. Better flood the field, Then let the native bloom become the yield; And, so, this Dyer submerged a small whole nation With crimson death, that England might, deep-keeled, Have for display, new seas of desolation.
HUMAN NATURE
The ocean, holding pure the azure's blue, Laughs at the tempests, with one empire's dust After an other, to round out Earth's crust.
Ah, so does Human Nature hold the hue It takes from heaven, its conscience, and laughs, too, At madness, wrecking life and with its gust Forming new islands, where Pride, Greed, or l.u.s.t, Welcomes the crater's glare, in sun-light's lieu.