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“LIBERTY!”

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“Liberty!” Is that the cry, then?

We have heard it oft of yore.

Once it had, we think, a meaning;

Let us hear it now no more.

We have read what history tells us

Of its heroes, martyrs too.

Doubtless they were very splendid,

But they’re not for me and you.

There were Greeks who fought and perished,

Won from Persians deathless graves.

Had we lived then, we’re aware that We’d have been those same Greeks’ slaves!

Then a Roman came who loved us;

Cæsar gave men tongues and swords.

Crying “Liberty,” they fought him,

Cato and his cut-throat lords.

When he’d give a broader franchise,

Lift the mangled nations bowed,

Crying “Liberty!” they killed him,

Brutus and his pandar crowd.

We have read what history tells us,

O the truthful memory clings!

Tacitus, the chartered liar,

Gloating over poisoned kings!

“Liberty!” The stale cry echoes

Past snug homesteads, tinsel thrones,

Over smoking fields and hovels,

Murdered peasants’ bleaching bones.

That’s the cry that mocked us madly,

Toiling in our living graves,

When hell-mines sent up the chorus:

Britons never shall be slaves!”

“Liberty!” We care not for it!

What we care for’s food, clothes, homes,

For our dear ones toiling, waiting

For the time that never comes!

Songs of the Army of the Night

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