Читать книгу Pike County Ballads and Other Poems - John Hay G. - Страница 11

WANDERLIEDER.

Оглавление

Table of Contents

SUNRISE IN THE PLACE DE LA CONCORDE.

(PARIS, AUGUST 1865.)

I stand at the break of day

In the Champs Elysees.

The tremulous shafts of dawning,

As they shoot o'er the Tuileries early,

Strike Luxor's cold grey spire,

And wild in the light of the morning

With their marble manes on fire,

Ramp the white Horses of Marly.

But the Place of Concord lies

Dead hushed 'neath the ashy skies.

And the Cities sit in council

With sleep in their wide stone eyes.

I see the mystic plain

Where the army of spectres slain

In the Emperor's life-long war

March on with unsounding tread

To trumpets whose voice is dead.

Their spectral chief still leads them—

The ghostly flash of his sword

Like a comet through mist shines far—

And the noiseless host is poured,

For the gendarme never heeds them,

Up the long dim road where thundered

The army of Italy onward

Through the great pale Arch of the Star!

The spectre army fades

Far up the glimmering hill,

But, vaguely lingering still,

A group of shuddering shades

Infects the pallid air,

Growing dimmer as day invades

The hush of the dusky square.

There is one that seems a King,

As if the ghost of a Crown

Still shadowed his jail-bleached hair;

I can hear the guillotine ring,

As its regicide note rang there,

When he laid his tired life down

And grew brave in his last despair.

And a woman frail and fair

Who weeps at leaving a world

Of love and revel and sin

In the vast Unknown to be hurled;

(For life was wicked and sweet

With kings at her small white feet!)

And one, every inch a Queen,

In life and in death a Queen,

Whose blood baptized the place,

In the days of madness and fear—

Her shade has never a peer

In majesty and grace.

Murdered and murderers swarm;

Slayers that slew and were slain,

Till the drenched place smoked with the rain

That poured in a torrent warm—

Till red as the Riders of Edom

Were splashed the white garments of Freedom

With the wash of the horrible storm!

And Liberty's hands were not clean

In the day of her pride unchained,

Her royal hands were stained

With the life of a King and Queen;

And darker than that with the blood

Of the nameless brave and good

Whose blood in witness clings

More damning than Queens' and Kings'.

Has she not paid it dearly?

Chained, watching her chosen nation

Grinding late and early

In the mills of usurpation?

Have not her holy tears,

Flowing through shameful years,

Washed the stains from her tortured hands?

We thought so when God's fresh breeze,

Blowing over the sleeping lands,

In 'Forty-Eight waked the world,

And the Burgher-King was hurled

From that palace behind the trees.

As Freedom with eyes aglow

Smiled glad through her childbirth pain,

How was the mother to know

That her woe and travail were vain?

A smirking servant smiled

When she gave him her child to keep;

Did she know he would strangle the child

As it lay in his arms asleep?

Liberty's cruellest shame!

She is stunned and speechless yet,

In her grief and bloody sweat

Shall we make her trust her blame?

The treasure of 'Forty-Eight

A lurking jail-bird stole,

She can but watch and wait

As the swift sure seasons roll.

And when in God's good hour

Comes the time of the brave and true,

Freedom again shall rise

With a blaze in her awful eyes

That shall wither this robber-power

As the sun now dries the dew.

This Place shall roar with the voice

Of the glad triumphant people,

And the heavens be gay with the chimes

Ringing with jubilant noise

From every clamorous steeple

The coming of better times.

And the dawn of Freedom waking

Shall fling its splendours far

Like the day which now is breaking

On the great pale Arch of the Star,

And back o'er the town shall fly,

While the joy-bells wild are ringing,

To crown the Glory springing

From the Column of July!

Pike County Ballads and Other Poems

Подняться наверх