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Arise, American!
The soul of a nation awaking, -High visions of daybreak, - I saw;A people renewed; the forsaking Of sin, and the worship of law.Sing, pine-tree; shout, to the hoarserResponse of the jubilant sea!Rush, river, foam-flecked like a courser; Warn all who are honest and free!Our birth-star beckons to trialThe faith of the far-fled years,Ere scorn was our share, and denial, Or laughter for patriots' tears.And Faith shall come forth the finer,From trampled thickets of fire,And the orient open diviner Before her, the heaven rise higher.O deep, sweet eyes, but severerThan steel! See you yet, where he comes -Our hero? Bend your glance nearer;Speak, Faith! For, as wakening drums,Your voice s...
George Parsons Lathrop
Ode To Duty
Jam non consilio bonus, sed more eo perductus, ut non tantumrecte facere possim, sed nisi recte facere non possim(Seneca, Letters 130.10)Stern Daughter of the Voice of God!O Duty! if that name thou loveWho art a light to guide, a rodTo check the erring, and reprove;Thou, who art victory and lawWhen empty terrors overawe;From vain temptations dost set free;And calmst the weary strife of frail humanity!There are who ask not if thine eyeBe on them; who, in love and truth,Where no misgiving is, relyUpon the genial sense of youth:Glad Hearts! without reproach or blot;Who do thy work, and know it not:Oh! if through confidence misplacedThey fail, thy saving arms, dread Power! around them cast.Serene wil...
William Wordsworth
Abraham Lincoln.
No martyr-blood hath ever flowed in vain! -No patriot bled, that proved not freedom's gain!Those tones, which despots heard with fear and dreadFrom living lips, ring sterner from the dead;And he who dies, lives, oft, more truly soThan had he never felt the untimely blow. And so with him thus, in an instant, hurledFrom earthly hopes and converse with the world.Each trickling blood-drop shall, with sudden powerAchieve the work of years in one short hour,And his faint death-sigh more strong arms uniteIn stern defence of Freedom and of Right,Than all he could have said by word or pen,In a whole life of threescore years and ten! Dead! fell assassin! did you think him dead,When, with unmurmuring lips, he bowed his head,Wh...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Beautiful City
Beautiful city, the centre and crater of European confusion,O you with your passionate shriek for the rights of an equalhumanity,How often your Re-volution has proven but E-volutionRolld again back on itself in the tides of a civic insanity!
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Centennial Hymn
I.Our fathers' God! from out whose handThe centuries fall like grains of sand,We meet to-day, united, free,And loyal to our land and Thee,To thank Thee for the era done,And trust Thee for the opening one.II.Here, where of old, by Thy design,The fathers spake that word of ThineWhose echo is the glad refrainOf rended bolt and falling chain,To grace our festal time, from allThe zones of earth our guests we call.III.Be with us while the New World greetsThe Old World thronging all its streets,Unveiling all the triumphs wonBy art or toil beneath the sun;And unto common good ordainThis rivalship of hand and brain.IV.Thou, who hast here in concord furledThe war flags of...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Halt Before Rome
Is it so, that the sword is broken,Our sword, that was halfway drawn?Is it so, that the light was a spark,That the bird we hailed as the larkSang in her sleep in the dark,And the song we took for a tokenBore false witness of dawn?Spread in the sight of the lion,Surely, we said, is the netSpread but in vain, and the snareVain; for the light is aware,And the common, the chainless air,Of his coming whom all we cry on;Surely in vain is it set.Surely the day is on our side,And heaven, and the sacred sun;Surely the stars, and the brightImmemorial inscrutable night:Yea, the darkness, because of our light,Is no darkness, but blooms as a bower-sideWhen the winter is over and done;Blooms underfoot with youn...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Equality
I saw a King, who spent his life to weaveInto a nation all his great heart thought,Unsatisfied until he should achieveThe grand ideal that his manhood sought;Yet as he saw the end within his reach,Death took the sceptre from his failing hand,And all men said, "He gave his life to teachThe task of honour to a sordid land!"Within his gates I saw, through all those years,One at his humble toil with cheery face,Whom (being dead) the children, half in tears,Remembered oft, and missed him from his place.If he be greater that his people blessedThan he the children loved, God knoweth best.
John McCrae
To Lawgivers.
Ever take it for granted, that man collectively wishesThat which is right; but take care never to think so of one!
Friedrich Schiller
The Sword and the Staff
The sword of the hero! The staff of the sage!Whose valor and wisdom Are stamped on the age!Time-hallowed mementos Of those who have rivenThe sceptre from tyrants, "The lightning from heaven!"This weapon, O Freedom! Was drawn by the son,And it never was sheathed Till the battle was won!No stain of dishonor Upon it we see!'Twas never surrendered-- Except to the free!While Fame claims the hero And patriot sage,Their names to emblazon On History's page,No holier relics Will liberty hoardThan FRANKLIN's staff, guarded By WASHINGTON's sword.
George Pope Morris
The Leader To Be
What shall the leader be in that great dayWhen we who sleep and dream that we are slavesShall wake and know that Liberty is ours?Mark well that word - not yours, not mine, but ours.For through the mingling of the separate streamsOf individual protest and desire,In one united sea of purpose, liesThe course to Freedom. When Progression takesHer undisputed right of way, and sinksThe old traditions and conventions whereThey may not rise, what shall the leader be?No mighty warrior skilled in crafts of war,Sowing earth's fertile furrows with dead menAnd staining crimson God's cerulean sea,To prove his prowess to a shuddering world.Nor yet a monarch with a silly crownPerched on an empty head, an in-bred heirTo sens...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
America Will Not Turn Back' Woodrow Wilson
America will not turn back; She did not idly start,But weighed full carefully and well Her grave, important part.She chose the part of Freedom's friend,And will pursue it, to the end.Great Liberty, who guards her gates, Will shine upon her course,And light the long, adventurous path With radiance from God's Source.And though blood dye that ocean track,America will not turn back.She will not turn until that hour When thunders through the worldThe crash of tyrant monarchies By Freedom's hand down-hurled.While Labour's voice from sea to seaSings loud, 'My country, 'tis of thee.'Then will our fair Columbia turn, While all wars' clamours cease,And with our banner lifted high Pro...
A Word From the Psalmist
Ps. xciv. 8.I.Take heed, ye unwise among the people:O ye fools, when will ye understand?From pulpit or choir beneath the steeple,Though the words be fierce, the tones are bland.But a louder than the Churchs echo thundersIn the ears of men who may not choose but hear,And the heart in him that hears it leaps and wonders,With triumphant hope astonished, or with fearFor the names whose sound was power awakenNeither love nor reverence now nor dread;Their strongholds and shrines are stormed and taken,Their kingdom and all its works are dead.II.Take heed: for the tide of time is risen:It is full not yet, though now so highThat spirits and hopes long pent in prisonFeel round them a sense of freedom nigh,And a sav...
Fables For The Holy Alliance. Fable Iii. The Torch Of Liberty.
I saw it all in Fancy's glass-- Herself, the fair, the wild magician,Who bade this splendid day-dream pass, And named each gliding apparition.'Twas like a torch-race--such as they Of Greece performed, in ages gone,When the fleet youths, in long array, Past the bright torch triumphant on.I saw the expectant nations stand, To catch the coming flame in turn;--I saw, from ready hand to hand, The clear tho' struggling glory burn.And oh! their joy, as it came near, 'Twas in itself a joy to see;--While Fancy whispered in my ear. "That torch they pass is Liberty!"And each, as she received the flame, Lighted her altar with its ray;Then, smiling, to the next who came, Speeded it on i...
Thomas Moore
Birth-Day Ode, 1796.
And wouldst thou seek the low abode Where PEACE delights to dwell? Pause Traveller on thy way of life! With many a snare and peril rife Is that long labyrinth of road: Dark is the vale of years before Pause Traveller on thy way! Nor dare the dangerous path exploreTill old EXPERIENCE comes to lend his leading ray. Not he who comes with lanthorn light Shall guide thy groping pace aright With faltering feet and slow; No! let him rear the torch on high And every maze shall meet thine eye, And every snare and every foe; Then with steady step and strong, Traveller, shalt thou march along. Tho' POWER invite thee to her hall, Regard not thou her tempting ...
Robert Southey
Our Limitations
We trust and fear, we question and believe,From life's dark threads a trembling faith to weave,Frail as the web that misty night has spun,Whose dew-gemmed awnings glitter in the sun.While the calm centuries spell their lessons out,Each truth we conquer spreads the realm of doubt;When Sinai's summit was Jehovah's throne,The chosen Prophet knew his voice alone;When Pilate's hall that awful question heard,The Heavenly Captive answered not a word.Eternal Truth! beyond our hopes and fearsSweep the vast orbits of thy myriad spheres!From age to age, while History carves sublimeOn her waste rock the flaming curves of time,How the wild swayings of our planet showThat worlds unseen surround the world we know.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Cuba.
As one long struggling to be free,O suffering isle! we look to thee In sympathy and deep desireThat thy fair borders yet shall holdA people happy, self-controlled, Saved and exalted - as by fire.Burning like thine own tropic heatThousands of lips afar repeat The story of thy wrongs and woes;While argosies to thee shall bear,Of men and money everywhere, Strength to withstand thy stubborn foes.Hispaniola waves her plumeDefiant over many a tomb Where sleep thy sons, the true and brave;But, lo! an army coming onThe places fill of heroes gone, For liberty their lives who gave.The nations wait to hear thy shoutOf "Independence!" ringing out, Chief of the Antilles, what wilt thou?Buf...
Hattie Howard
My Only Property.
I feel that I'm possess'd of nought,Saving the free unfetterd thoughtWhich from my bosom seeks to flow,And each propitious passing hourThat suffers me in all its powerA loving fate with truth to know.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Panorama
"A! fredome is a nobill thing!Fredome mayse man to haif liking.Fredome all solace to man giffis;He levys at ese that frely levys!A nobil hart may haif nane eseNa ellys nocht that may him pleseGyff Fredome failythe."