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Translations. - The Words Of Faith. (From Schiller.)
Three words I will tell you, of meaning full:The lips of the many shout them;Yet were they born of no sect or school,The heart only knows about them: That man is of everything worth bereft Who in those three words has no faith left:Man is born free--and is free alwayEven were he born in fetters!Let not the mob's cry lead you astray,Or the misdeeds of frantic upsetters: Fear not the slave when he breaks his bands; Fear nothing from any free man's hands.And Virtue--it is no empty sound;That a man can obey her, no folly;Even if he stumble all over the groundHe yet can follow the Holy; And what never wisdom of wise man knew A child-like spirit can simply do.And a God there is--a s...
George MacDonald
Anniversary Poem
Once more, dear friends, you meet beneathA clouded skyNot yet the sword has found its sheath,And on the sweet spring airs the breathOf war floats by.Yet trouble springs not from the ground,Nor pain from chance;The Eternal order circles round,And wave and storm find mete and boundIn Providence.Full long our feet the flowery waysOf peace have trod,Content with creed and garb and phrase:A harder path in earlier daysLed up to God.Too cheaply truths, once purchased dear,Are made our own;Too long the world has smiled to hearOur boast of full corn in the earBy others sown;To see us stir the martyr firesOf long ago,And wrap our satisfied desiresIn the singed mantles that our siresH...
John Greenleaf Whittier
To a Republican Friend, 1848 - Continued
Yet, when I muse on what life is, I seemRather to patience prompted, than that prowlProspect of hope which France proclaims so loud,France, famd in all great arts, in none supreme.Seeing this Vale, this Earth, whereon we dream,Is on all sides oershadowd by the highUnoerleapd Mountains of Necessity,Sparing us narrower margin than we deem.Nor will that day dawn at a human nod,When, bursting through the network superposdBy selfish occupation, plot and plan,Lust, avarice, envy liberated man,All difference with his fellow man composd,Shall be left standing face to face with God
Matthew Arnold
Peace.
Halt! ye Legions, sheathe your Steel:Blood grows precious; shed no more:Cease your toils; your wounds to healLo! beams of Mercy reach the shore!From Realms of everlasting lightThe favour'd guest of Heaven is come:Prostrate your Banners at the sight,And bear the glorious tidings home.The plunging corpse with half-clos'd eyes,No more shall stain th' unconscious brine;Yon pendant gay, that streaming flies,Around its idle Staff shall twine.Behold! along th' etherial skyHer beams o'er conquering Navies spread;Peace! Peace! the leaping Sailors cry,With shouts that might arouse the dead.Then forth Britannia's thunder pours;A vast reiterated sound!From Line to Line the Cannon roars,And spreads the blazing joy around....
Robert Bloomfield
To The Citizens[1]
And shall the Patriot who maintain'd your cause,From future ages only meet applause?Shall he, who timely rose t'his country's aid,By her own sons, her guardians, be betray'd?Did heathen virtues in your hearts reside,These wretches had been damn'd for parricide. Should you behold, whilst dreadful armies threatThe sure destruction of an injured state,Some hero, with superior virtue bless'd,Avert their rage, and succour the distress'd;Inspired with love of glorious liberty,Do wonders to preserve his country free;He like the guardian shepherd stands, and theyLike lions spoil'd of their expected prey,Each urging in his rage the deadly dart,Resolved to pierce the generous hero's heart;Struck with the sight, your souls would swell with grief,...
Jonathan Swift
Lines On The Entry Of The Austrians Into Naples, 1821.
carbone notati.Ay--down to the dust with them, slaves as they are, From this hour let the blood in their dastardly veins,That shrunk at the first touch of Liberty's war, Be wasted for tyrants, or stagnate in chains.On, on like a cloud, thro' their beautiful vales, Ye locusts of tyranny, blasting them o'er--Fill, fill up their wide sunny waters, ye sails From each slave-mart of Europe and shadow their shore!Let their fate be a mock-word--let men of all lands Laugh out with a scorn that shall ring to the poles,When each sword that the cowards let fall from their hands Shall be forged into fetters to enter their souls.And deep, and more deep, as the iron is driven, Base slaves! let the whet of their ag...
Thomas Moore
Boston Hymn
READ IN MUSIC HALL, JANUARY 1, 1863The word of the Lord by nightTo the watching Pilgrims came,As they sat by the seaside,And filled their hearts with flame.God said, I am tired of kings,I suffer them no more;Up to my ear the morning bringsThe outrage of the poor.Think ye I made this ballA field of havoc and war,Where tyrants great and tyrants smallMight harry the weak and poor?My angel,--his name is Freedom,--Choose him to be your king;He shall cut pathways east and westAnd fend you with his wing.Lo! I uncover the landWhich I hid of old time in the West,As the sculptor uncovers the statueWhen he has wrought his best;I show Columbia, of the rocksWhich dip their foot in the s...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Belgium
The Blatant Beast saw meadows, made for peace,Sunlit and gently asway, and held them light,Till each green blade grew rigid in the nightAnd ruddied with a glorious morns increase.Thou hast suffered; nor till Freedom find releaseAnd set for ever on the shining heightThe eternal rolling banner of her mightShall thy great gift of strife and suffering cease.We, bred of one small island in the west,A little shrine of Freedom, far awayWe, who can bow at no strong tyrants hest,Bend low our heads in pride to thee to-day,For all unknown, a smiling babe at rest,Within thy lowly manger Freedom lay.
John Le Gay Brereton
To John C. Fremont
Thy error, Fremont, simply was to actA brave mans part, without the statesmans tact,And, taking counsel but of common sense,To strike at cause as well as consequence.Oh, never yet since Roland wound his hornAt Roncesvalles, has a blast been blownFar-heard, wide-echoed, startling as thine own,Heard from the van of freedoms hope forlornIt had been safer, doubtless, for the time,To flatter treason, and avoid offenceTo that Dark Power whose underlying crimeHeaves upward its perpetual turbulence.But if thine be the fate of all who breakThe ground for truths seed, or forerun their yearsTill lost in distance, or with stout hearts makeA lane for freedom through the level spears,Still take thou courage! God has spoken through thee,Irrevocable,...
The Third Of February, 1852
My Lords, we heard you speak: you told us allThat Englands honest censure went too far,That our free press should cease to brawl,Not sting the fiery Frenchman into war.It was our ancient privilege, my Lords,To fling whateer we felt, not fearing, into words.We love not this French God, the child of hell,Wild War, who breaks the converse of the wise;But though we love kind Peace so well,We dare not even by silence sanction lies.It might be safe our censures to withdraw,And yet, my Lords, not well; there is a higher law.As long as we remain, we must speak free,Tho all the storm of Eurpoe on us break.No little German state are we,But the one voice in Europe; we must speak,That if to-night our greatness were struck dead,
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Of Old Sat Freedom
Of old sat Freedom on the heights,The thunders breaking at her feet:Above her shook the starry lights:She heard the torrents meet.There in her place she did rejoice,Self-gather'd in her prophet-mind,But fragments of her mighty voiceCame rolling on the wind.Then stept she down thro' town and fieldTo mingle with the human race,And part by part to men reveal'dThe fullness of her face --Grave mother of majestic works,From her isle-alter gazing down,Who, God-like, grasps the triple forks,And, King-like, wears the crown:Her open eyes desire the truth.The wisdom of a thousand yearsIs in them. May perpetual youthKeep dry their light from tears;That her fair form may stand and shineMake bright ...
Boston - Sicut Patribus, Sit Deus Nobis
The rocky nook with hilltops threeLooked eastward from the farms,And twice each day the flowing seaTook Boston in its arms;The men of yore were stout and poor,And sailed for bread to every shore.And where they went on trade intentThey did what freemen can,Their dauntless ways did all men praise,The merchant was a man.The world was made for honest trade,--To plant and eat be none afraid.The waves that rocked them on the deepTo them their secret told;Said the winds that sung the lads to sleep,'Like us be free and bold!'The honest waves refused to slavesThe empire of the ocean caves.Old Europe groans with palaces,Has lords enough and more;--We plant and build by foaming seasA city of the poor;--
Thus Saith The Lord, I Offer Thee Three Things.
In poisonous dens, where traitors hideLike bats that fear the day,While all the land our charters claimIs sweating blood and breathing flame,Dead to their country's woe and shame,The recreants whisper STAY!In peaceful homes, where patriot firesOn Love's own altars glow,The mother hides her trembling fear,The wife, the sister, checks a tear,To breathe the parting word of cheer,Soldier of Freedom, Go!In halls where Luxury lies at ease,And Mammon keeps his state,Where flatterers fawn and menials crouch,The dreamer, startled from his couch,Wrings a few counters from his pouch,And murmurs faintly WAIT!In weary camps, on trampled plainsThat ring with fife and drum,The battling host, whose harness gleams...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Common-Wealth
Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free!The blue of the sky, the shade of a tree,And the unowned leagues of the shining sea.Be grateful, my heart, for everyman's gold;By road-way and river and hill unfoldSun-coloured blossoms that never are sold.For the little joys sometimes say a grace;The scent of a rose, the frost's fairy lace,Or the sound of the rain in a quiet place.Be glad of what cannot be bought or beguiled;The trust of the tameless, the fearless, the wild,The song of a bird and the faith of a child.For prairie and mountain, windswept and high,For betiding beauty of earth and sky -Say a benediction e'er you pass by.Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free!The joy of life and the spring'...
Virna Sheard
To The Lord Viscount Forbes.
FROM THE CITY OP WASHINGTON.If former times had never left a traceOf human frailty in their onward race,Nor o'er their pathway written, as they ran,One dark memorial of the crimes of man;If every age, in new unconscious prime,Rose, like a phenix, from the fires of time,To wing its way unguided and alone,The future smiling and the past unknown;Then ardent man would to himself be new,Earth at his foot and heaven within his view:Well might the novice hope, the sanguine schemeOf full perfection prompt his daring dream,Ere cold experience, with her veteran lore,Could tell him, fools had dreamt as much before.But, tracing as we do, through age and clime,The plans of virtue midst the deeds of crime,The thinking follies and the reason...
You Ask Me, Why, Tho' Ill At Ease
You ask me, why, tho' ill at ease,Within this region I subsist,Whose spirits falter in the mist,And languish for the purple seas.It is the land that freemen till,That sober-suited Freedom chose,The land, where girt with friends or foesA man may speak the thing he will;A land of settled government,A land of just and old renown,Where Freedom slowly broadens downFrom precedent to precedent:Where faction seldom gathers head,But by degrees to fullness wrought,The strength of some diffusive thoughtHath time and space to work and spread.Should banded unions persecuteOpinion, and induce a timeWhen single thought is civil crime,And individual freedom mute;Tho' Power should make from land to landThe name of...
Arms And The Man. - The Flag Of The Republic.
My harp soon ceases; but I here allegeIts strings are in my heart and tremble there:My Song's last strain shall be a claim and pledge - A claim, a pledge, a prayer!I stand, as stood, in storied days of old,Vasco Balboa staring o'er bright seasWhen fair Pacific's tide of limpid gold Surged up against his knees.For haughty Spain, her banner in his hand,He claimed a New World, sea, and plain, and crag -I claim the Future's Ocean for this land And here I plant her flag!Float out, oh flag, from Freedom's burnished lance!Float out, oh flag, in Red, and White, and Blue!The Union's colors and the hues of France Commingled on the view!Float out, oh flag, and all thy splendors wake!Float out, oh f...
James Barron Hope
The Words Of Belief.
Three words will I name thee around and about,From the lip to the lip, full of meaning, they flee;But they had not their birth in the being without,And the heart, not the lip, must their oracle be!And all worth in the man shall forever be o'erWhen in those three words he believes no more.Man is made free! Man by birthright is free,Though the tyrant may deem him but born for his tool.Whatever the shout of the rabble may beWhatever the ranting misuse of the foolStill fear not the slave, when he breaks from his chain,For the man made a freeman grows safe in his gain.And virtue is more than a shade or a sound,And man may her voice, in this being, obey;And though ever he slip on the stony ground,Yet ever again to the godlike way,To the s...
Friedrich Schiller