Various

Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 57, No. 352, February 1845


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unappall'd she views that bloody bier,

      Takes her last sad farewell without a tear.

      Each weeping muse hath told how Essex died,

      Favourite and victim, doom'd by female pride.

      How courtly Suffolk spent his latest day,

      And dying Raleigh penn'd his deathless lay.

      Here noble Strafford too severely taught

      How dearly royal confidence is bought;

      Received the warrant which demands his breath,

      And with a calm composure walk'd — to death.

      Nor 'mong the names that liberty holds dear,

      Shall the great Russell be forgotten here;

      His country's boast — each patriot's honest pride —

      For them he lived — for them he wept and died.

      And must we yet another page unfold,

      To glean fresh moral from the deeds of old?

      Ye busy spirits that pervade the air,

      And still with dark intents to earth repair;

      That goad the passions of the human breast,

      And bear the missives of Fate's stern behest —

      Say, stifle ye those thoughts that Heaven reveals —

      The tears of sympathy — the glow that steals

      O'er the young heart, or prompts soft pity's sigh —

      The prayer to snatch from harsh captivity

      The virtuous doom'd — teach but to praise — admire —

      Forbid to catch one spark of generous fire?

      The godlike wish of genius, man to bless,

      With rank and wealth still leaguing to oppress!

      Oh! when shall glory wreathe bright virtue's claim,

      And both to honour give a holier fame?

      Ye towers of death! — the noblest still your prey,

      Here spent in solitude their sunless day;

      In your wall'd graves a living doom they found;

      Broke o'er their night no ray, no gladd'ning sound.

      Yet the mind's splendour, with imprison'd wings,

      Rose high, and shone where the pure seraph sings;

      Where human thought taught conscience it was free,

      And burst the shackles of the Romish See.

      Oh, sweetest liberty! how dear to die!

      Bound by each sacred link;, each holy tie;

      To save unspotted from the spoiler's hand,

      Child of our heart — our own — our native land!

      And, oh! how dear life's latest drop to shed,

      To free the minds by superstition led; —

      To spread with holy earnest zeal abroad,

      That priceless gem — freedom to worship God!

      To keep unmingled with the world's vain lore,

      The faith that lightens every darken'd hour;

      That faith which can alone the sinner save,

      Prepare for death, and raise him from the grave;

      Show how, by yielding all, we surest prove,

      How humbly, deeply, truly, we can love;

      How much we prize that hope divinely given,

      The key — the seal — the passport into heaven.

      Part II

      What sudden blaze spreads through the crimson skies,

      And still in loftier volumes seems to rise?

      What meteor gleams, that from the fiery north,

      In savage grandeur fast are bursting forth,

      And light your very walls? Tell me, ye Towers —

      'Tis Smithfield revelling in his festal hours,

      Fed with your captives: shrieks that wildly pierce

      The roaring flames now undulating fierce,

      And gasping struggles, mingled groans, proclaim

      The power of torture o'er the writhing frame.

      Dark are your dens, and deep your secret cells,

      Whose silent gloom your tale of horrors tells.

      Saw ye how Cranmer dared — yet fear'd to die,

      Trembling 'mid hopes of immortality?

      He stood alone; — a brighter band appears

      Unaw'd by threats — impregnable to fears;

      Who suffer'd glad the sacred truth to spread,

      In mild obedience to its fountain-head.

      And when at length our popish James would see

      Cold superstition bend th' unhallow'd knee,

      The mystic tapers on our altars burn,

      And clouds of incense shade the fragrant urn,

      Shone England's prelates faithful to their call,

      In bonds of truth within thy massive wall.

      See grace divine — see Heaven in mercy pour,

      The balm of peace on Albion's boasted shore.

      Once wrought by captive fingers on thy wall,

      The hero's home and prison, grave and pall,

      What dark lines meet the startled stranger's gaze,

      Thoughts that ennoble — sentiments that raise

      The iron'd captive from captivity,

      How high above the power of tyranny! —

      And ye that wander by the evening tide,

      Where mountains swell or mossy streamlets glide;

      That on fresh hills can hail morn's orient ray,

      And chant with birds your grateful hymns to day;

      Or seek at noon, beneath some pleasant shade,

      To feel the sunbeams cool'd by leafy glade —

      That free as air, morn, noon, and eve, can roam,

      Where'er you list, and nature call your home;

      Learn from a hopeless prisoner's words and fate,

      "Virtue is valour