Classic and Contemporary Poetry
TO SIR FRANCIS BURDETT ON HIS SPEECH DELIVERED IN PARLIAMENT, AUGUST 7, 1832, RESPECTING THE FOREIGN, by THOMAS CAMPBELL Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Burdett, enjoy thy justly foremost fame Last Line: That lick the tyrant's feet, and smile upon his crimes! Subject(s): Burdett, Sir Francis (1770-1844); Great Britain - Foreign Relations | ||||||||
BURDETT, enjoy thy justly foremost fame, Through good and ill report -- through calm and storm -- For forty years the pilot of reform! But that which shall afresh entwine thy name With patriot laurels never to be sere, Is that thou hast come nobly forth to chide Our slumbering statesmen for their lack of pride -- Their flattery of Oppressors, and their fear -- When Britain's lifted finger, and her frown, Might call the nations up, and cast their tyrants down! Invoke the scorn -- Alas! too few inherit The scorn for despots cherished by our sires, That baffled Europe's persecuting fires, And sheltered helpless states! -- Recall that spirit, And conjure back Old England's haughty mind -- Convert the men who waver now, and pause Between their love of self and human kind; And move, Amphion-like, those hearts of stone -- The hearts that have been deaf to Poland's dying groan! Tell them, we hold the Rights of Man too dear, To bless ourselves with lonely freedom blest; But could we hope, with sole and selfish breast, To breathe untroubled Freedom's atmosphere? -- Suppose we wished it? England could not stand A lone oasis in the desert ground Of Europe's slavery; from the waste around Oppression's fiery blast and whirling sand Would reach and scathe us! No; it may not be: Britannia and the world conjointly must be free! Burdett, demand why Britons send abroad Soft greetings to th' infanticidal Czar, The Bear on Poland's babes that wages war! Once, we are told, a mother's shriek o'erawed A lion, and he dropped her lifted child; But Nicholas, whom neither God nor law, Nor Poland's shrieking mothers overawe, Outholds to us his friendship's gory clutch: Shrink, Britain -- shrink, my king and country, from the touch! He prays to Heaven for England's king, he says -- And dares he to the God of mercy kneel, Besmeared with massacres from head to heel? No! Moloch is his god -- to him he prays; And if his weird-like prayers had power to bring An influence, their power would be to curse. His hate is baleful, but his love is worse -- A serpent's slaver deadlier than its sting! Oh, feeble statesmen! ignominious times! That lick the tyrant's feet, and smile upon his crimes! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A DIALOGUE BETWEEN GEORGE AND FOX by PHILIP FRENEAU EPIGRAM ON THE CHINESE TREATY by THOMAS HOOD STANZAS; BRITAIN AGAINST THE WORLD by THOMAS HOOD THE ASHANTEE WAR: THE FALL OF COOMASSIE by WILLIAM MCGONAGALL THE BATTLE OF CRESSY by WILLIAM MCGONAGALL THE CAPTURE OF HAVANA by WILLIAM MCGONAGALL THE LAST BERKSHIRE ELEVEN: THE HEROES OF MAIWAND by WILLIAM MCGONAGALL IMITATIONS OF HORACE: EPISTLE 2.1 by ALEXANDER POPE BRITANNIA by JAMES THOMSON (1700-1748) BATTLE OF THE BALTIC by THOMAS CAMPBELL DOWNFALL OF POLAND [FALL OF WARSAW, 1794] by THOMAS CAMPBELL |
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