RELUCTANT call it was; the rite delayed; And in the Senate some there were who doffed The last of their humanity, and scoffed At providential judgments, undismayed By their own daring. But the People prayed As with one voice; their flinty heart grew soft With penitential sorrow, and aloft Their spirit mounted, crying, "God us aid!" Oh that with aspirations more intense, Chastised by self-abasement more profound, This People, once so happy, so renowned For liberty, would seek from God defence Against far heavier ill, the pestilence Of revolution, impiously unbound! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FOUR BROTHERS by CARL SANDBURG LAMENT FOR CULLODEN by ROBERT BURNS THE SHIPWRECK, SELECTION by WILLIAM FALCONER ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 20 by PHILIP SIDNEY IN MEMORIAM A.H.H.: 96 by ALFRED TENNYSON THE FROGS: HYMN OF THE INITIATES by ARISTOPHANES THE UNKNOWN GOD by CHARLES GRANGER BLANDEN IN VINCULIS; SONNETS WRITTEN IN AN IRISH PRISON: FAREWELL DARK by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |