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Dissonant arms; and Art, which cannot die, With divine wand traced on our earthly home

Fit imagery to pave heaven's everlasting dome.

IO.

"Thou Huntress swifter than the Moon! thou terror

Of the world's wolves! thou bearer of the

quiver

Whose sunlike shafts pierce tempest-winged Error,

As light may pierce the clouds when they dissever

In the calm regions of the orient day!

Luther caught thy wakening glance : Like lightning from his leaden lance Reflected, it dissolved the visions of the trance In which, as in a tomb, the nations lay; And England's prophets hailed thee as their

queen,

In songs whose music cannot pass away
Though it must flow for ever.

seen,

Before the spirit-sighted countenance

Not un

Of Milton, didst thou pass from the sad

scene

Beyond whose night he saw, with a dejected

II.

“The eager Hours and unreluctant Years As on a dawn-illumined mountain stood, Trampling to silence their loud hopes and fears,

Darkening each other with their multi

tude,

And cried aloud 'Liberty!' Indignation Answered Pity from her cave ;

Death grew pale within the grave, And desolation howled to the destroyer 'Save!' When, like heaven's sun girt by the exhalation

Of its own glorious light, thou didst arise, Chasing thy foes from nation unto nation Like shadows: as if day had cloven the skies

At dreaming midnight o'er the western wave, Men started, staggering with a glad surprise,

Under the lightnings of thine unfamiliar eyes.

I2.

"Thou heaven of earth! what spells could pall thee then

In ominous eclipse?

A thousand years

Bred from the slime of deep Oppression's den Dyed all thy liquid light with blood and

tears,

Till thy sweet stars could weep the stain

away.

How, like Bacchanals of blood,

Round France, the ghastly vintage, stood

Destruction's sceptred slaves, and Folly's mitred brood!

When one, like them, but mightier far than they,

The Anarch of thine own bewildered

powers,

Rose armies mingled in obscure array, Like clouds with clouds darkening the sacred bowers

Of serene heaven. He, by the past pursued,

Rests with those dead but unforgotten

hours

Whose ghosts scare victor kings in their ancestral towers.

13.

"England yet sleeps: was she not called of old?

Spain calls her now, -as with its thrilling thunder

Vesuvius wakens Ætna, and the cold Snow-crags by its reply are cloven in sunder:

O'er the lit waves every Æolian isle

From Pithecusa to Pelorus

Howls and leaps and glares in chorus :

They cry, 'Be dim ye lamps of heaven suspended o'er us!

Her chains are threads of gold,—she need but smile,

And they dissolve; but Spain's were links
of steel,

Till bit to dust by virtue's keenest file.
Twins of a single destiny! appeal
To the eternal years enthroned before us

In the dim West! Impress us from a
seal,

All ye have thought and done! Time cannot dare conceal.

14.

"Tomb of Arminius! render up thy dead,— Till, like a standard from a watch-tower's staff,

His soul may stream over the tyrant's

head!

Thy victory shall be his epitaph!

Wild Bacchanal of truth's mysterious wine,
King-deluded Germany,

His dead spirit lives in thee!

Why do we fear or hope? Thou art already free!

And thou, lost paradise of this divine

And glorious world! thou flowery wilderness !

Thou island of eternity! thou shrine

Where Desolation, clothed with loveliness, Worships the thing thou wert! O Italy,

Gather thy blood into thy heart; repress The beasts who make their dens thy sacred palaces!

15.

"Oh that the free would stamp the impious

name

Of 'King' into the dust; or write it there, So that this blot upon the page of fame Were as a serpent's path which the light air Erases, and the flat sands close behind! Ye the oracle have heard:

Lift the victory-flashing sword,

And cut the snaky knots of this foul gordian word,

Which, weak itself as stubble, yet can bind Into a mass irrefragably firm

The axes and the rods which awe mankind. The sound has poison in it; 'tis the sperm Of what makes life foul, cankerous, and abhorred.

Disdain not Thou, at thine appointed term,

To set thine armèd heel on this reluctant worm.

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