Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE FLAG OF OLD ENGLAND, by JOSEPH HOWE (1804-1873) Poet's Biography First Line: All hail to the day when the britons came over Last Line: Chorushail to the day, &c. Subject(s): Cornwallis, Charles (1738-1805); Flags - Great Britain; Halifax, Canada; Nova Scotia | ||||||||
(A Centenary Song, written for the one hundredth anniversary of the landing of Lord Cornwallis at Halifax.) All hail to the day when the Britons came over, And planted their standard, with sea-foam still wet, Around and above us their spirits will hover, Rejoicing to mark how we honor it yet. Beneath it the emblems they cherished are waving, The Rose of Old England the roadside perfumes; The Shamrock and Thistle the north winds are braving, Securely the Mayflower blushes and blooms. Chorus Hail to the day when the Britons came over, And planted their standard with sea-foam still wet, Around and above us their spirits will hover, Rejoicing to mark how we honor it yet. We'll honor it yet, we'll honor it yet, The flag of Old England! we'll honor it yet. In the temples they founded, their faith is maintained, Every foot of the soil they bequeathed is still ours, The graves where they moulder, no foe has profaned, But we wreathe them with verdure, and strew them with flowers! The blood of no brother, in civil strife pour'd, In this hour of rejoicing, encumbers our souls! The frontier's the field for the Patriot's sword, And curs'd be the weapon that Faction controls! ChorusHail to the day, &c. Then hail to the day! 'tis with memories crowded, Delightful to trace 'midst the mists of the past, Like the features of Beauty, bewitchingly shrouded, They shine through the shadows Time o'er them has cast. As travellers track to its source in the mountains, The stream, which far swelling, expands o'er the plains, Our hearts, on this day, fondly turn to the fountains Whence flow the warm currents that bound in our veins. ChorusHail to the day, &c. And proudly we trace them: No warrior flying From city assaulted, and fanes overthrown, With the last of his race on the battlements dying, And weary with wandering, founded our own. From the Queen of the Islands, then famous in story, A century since, our brave forefathers came, And our kindred yet fill the wide world with her glory, Enlarging her Empire, and spreading her name. ChorusHail to the day, &c. Ev'ry flash of her genius our pathway enlightens Ev'ry field she explores we are beckoned to tread, Each laurel she gathers, our future day brightens We joy with her living, and mourn for her dead. Then hail to the day when the Britons came over, And planted their standard, with sea-foam still wet, Above and around us their spirits shall hover, Rejoicing to mark how we honor it yet. ChorusHail to the day, &c. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WORDS ARE NEVER ENOUGH by CHARLES TORY BRUCE THE BONNY BUNCH OF ROSES by ANONYMOUS FIRST DEATH IN NOVA SCOTIA by ELIZABETH BISHOP ELIZABETHAN & NOVA SCOTIAN MUSIC by CHARLES LAURENCE NORTH SIX BUILDINGS: 3. LIBRARY by CHARLES LAURENCE NORTH TO HIS WIFE by JOSEPH STANSBURY RIO GRANDE by ALBERT EDMUND TROMBLY THE INDIAN MASSACRE, FR. ACADIA by JOSEPH HOWE (1804-1873) |
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