YOU'RE a traitor convicted, you know very well! Jefferson D., Jefferson D.! You thought it a capital thing to rebel, Jefferson D.! But there's one thing I'll say: You'll discover some day, When you see a stout cotton cord hang from a tree, There's an accident happened you did n't foresee, Jefferson D.! What shall be found upon history's page? Jefferson D., Jefferson D.! When a student explores the republican age! Jefferson D.! He will find, as is meet, That at Judas's feet You sit in your shame, with the impotent plea, That you hated the land and the law of the free, Jefferson D.! What do you see in your visions at night, Jefferson D., Jefferson D.? Does the spectacle furnish you any delight, Jefferson D.? Do you feel in disgrace The black cap o'er your face, While the tremor creeps down from your heart to your knee, And freedom, insulted, approves the decree, Jefferson D.? Oh! long have we pleaded, till pleading is vain, Jefferson D., Jefferson D.! Your hands are imbrued with the blood of the slain, Jefferson D.! And at last, for the right, We arise in our might, A people united, resistless, and free, And declare that rebellion no longer shall be! Jefferson D.! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET TO GUIDO CAVALCANTI by DANTE ALIGHIERI WHAT BEST I SEE; TO U.S.G. RETURN'D FROM HIS WORLD'S TOUR by WALT WHITMAN AT THE GRAVE OF BURNS; SEVEN YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH BILLY, HE'S IN TROUBLE by JAMES BARTON ADAMS THE FAST OF TEBETH by JOSEPH BEN SAMUEL BONFILS HINC LACHRIMAE; OR THE AUTHOR TO AURORA: 5 by WILLIAM BOSWORTH |