READER, if thou canst boast the noble name Of Englishman, it is enough to know Thou standest in Old Sarum. But if chance 'Twas thy misfortune in some other land, Inheritor of slavery, to be born, Read and be envious! dost thou see yon hut, Its old mud mossy walls with many a patch Spotted? know, foreigner! so wisely well In England it is ordered, that the laws Which bind the people, from themselves should spring; Know that the dweller in that little hut, That wretched hovel, to the senate sends Two delegates. Think, foreigner, where such An individual's rights, how happy all! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CHARGE AT SANTIAGO by WILLIAM HAMILTON HAYNE SUMMER IN ENGLAND, 1914 by ALICE MEYNELL THE WARM CRADLE by LAWRENCE ALMA-TADEMA THREE PASTORAL ELEGIES: TO THE READER (1) by WILLIAM BASSE EPITAPH ON DIOPHANTUS by JAMES HAY BEATTIE CHEF PERNOLLET by BERTON BRALEY |