WE are what suns and winds and waters make us; The mountains are our sponsors, and the rills Fashion and win their nursling with their smiles. But where the land is dim from tyranny, Their tiny pleasures occupy the place Of glories and of duties; as the feet Of fabled fairies when the sun goes down Trip o'er the grass where wrestlers strove by day. Then Justice, call'd the Eternal One above, Is more inconstant than the buoyant form That burst into existence from the froth Of ever-varying ocean: what is best Then becomes worst; what loveliest, most deformed. The heart is hardest in the softest climes, The passions flourish, the affections die. O thou vast tablet of these awful truths, That fillest all the space between the seas, Spreading from Venice's deserted courts To the Tarentine and Hydruntine mole, What lifts thee up? what shakes thee? 'tis the breath of God. Awake, ye nations! spring to life! Let the last work of his right hand appear Fresh with his image, Man. Thou recreant slave That sittest afar off and helpest not, O thou degenerate Albion! with what shame Do I survey thee, pushing forth the spunge At thy spear's length, in mockery at the thirst of holy Freedom in his agony, And prompt and keen to pierce the wounded side! Must Italy then wholly rot away Amid her slime, before she germinate Into fresh vigour, into form again? What thunder bursts upon mine ear! some isle Hath surely risen from the gulphs profound, Eager to suck the sunshine from the breast Of beauteous Nature, and to catch the gale From golden Hermus and Melena's brow. A greater thing than isle, than continent, Than earth itself, than ocean circling earth, Hath risen there; regenerate Man hath risen. Generous old bard of Chios! not that Jove Deprived thee in thy latter days of sight Would I complain, but that no higher theme Than a disdainful youth, a lawless king, A pestilence, a pyre, awoke thy song, When on the Chian coast, one javelin's throw From where thy tombstone, where thy cradle stood, Twice twenty self-devoted Greeks assail'd The naval host of Asia, at one blow Scattered it into air... and Greece was free... And ere these glories beam'd, thy day had closed. Let all that Elis ever saw, give way, All that Olympian Jove e'er smiled upon: The Marathonian columns never told A tale more glorious, never Salamis, Nor, faithful in the centre of the false, Platea, nor Anthela, from whose mount Benignant Ceres wards the blessed Laws, And sees the Amphictyon dip his weary foot In the warm streamlet of the strait below. Goddess! altho' thy brow was never rear'd Among the powers that guarded or assail'd Perfidious Ilion, parricidal Thebes, Or other walls whose war-belt e'er inclosed Man's congregated crimes and vengeful pain, Yet hast thou toucht the extremes of grief and joy; Grief upon Enna's mead and Hell's ascent, A solitary mother; joy beyond, Far beyond, that thy woe, in this thy fane: The tears were human, but the bliss divine. I, in the land of strangers, and deprest With sad and certain presage for my own, Exult at hope's fresh dayspring, tho' afar, There where my youth was not unexercised By chiefs in willing war and faithful song: Shades as they were, they were not empty shades, Whose bodies haunt our world and blear our sun, Obstruction worse than swamp and shapeless sands. Peace, praise, eternal gladness, to the souls That, rising from the seas into the heavens, Have ransom'd first their country with their blood! O thou immortal Spartan! at whose name The marble table sounds beneath my palms, Leonidas! even thou wilt not disdain To mingle names august as these with thine; Nor thou, twin-star of glory, thou whose rays Stream'd over Corinth on the double sea, Achaian and Saronic; whom the sons Of Syracuse, when Death removed thy light, Wept more than slavery ever made them weep, But shed (if gratitude is sweet) sweet tears.. The hand that then pour'd ashes o'er their heads Was loosen'd from its desperate chain by thee. What now can press mankind into one mass, For Tyranny to tread the more secure? From gold alone is drawn the guilty wire That Adulation trills: she mocks the tone Of Duty, Courage, Virtue, Piety, And under her sits Hope. O how unlike That graceful form in azure vest array'd, With brow serene, and eyes on heaven alone In patience fixt, in fondness unobscured! What monsters coil beneath the spreading tree Of Despotism! what wastes extend around! What poison floats upon the distant breeze! But who are those that cull and deal its fruit? Creatures that shun the light and fear the shade, Bloated and fierce, Sleep's mien and Famine's cry. Rise up again, rise in thy dignity, Dejected Man! and scare this brood away. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BATTLEDORE AND SHUTTLECOCK by AMY LOWELL THE LOVE OF CHRIST WHICH PASSETH KNOWLEDGE by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI ALCAICS: TO H. F. BROWN by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON GOOD-NIGHT by PHILIP EDWARD THOMAS CRY WOE, WOE, AND LET THE GOOD PREVAIL, FR. AGAMEMNON by AESCHYLUS SONNET: 11 by RICHARD BARNFIELD ADDRESS TO SUBSCRIBERS .. FUND FOR CLOTHING CHILDREN CHARITY SCHOOL by BERNARD BARTON |