Filled with the light of a prophetic fire,   And standing by the Western sea, above   The youngest, fairest city in the world,   Named in another tongue than his for one   Ensainted, saw its populous domain   Plague-smitten with a nameless shame. For there   Red-handed murder rioted; and there   The people gathered gold, nor cared to loose   The assassin's fingers from the victim's throat,   But said, each in his vile pursuit engrossed:   'Am I my brother's keeper? Let the Law   Look to the matter.' But the Law did not.   And there, O pitiful! the babe was slain   Within its mother's breast and the same grave   Held babe and mother; and the people smiled,   Still gathering gold, and said: 'The Law, the Law,'   Then the great poet, touched upon the lips   With a live coal from Truth's high altar, raised   His arms to heaven and sang a song of doom—   Sang of the time to be, when God should lean   Indignant from the Throne and lift his hand,   And that foul city be no more!—a tale,   A dream, a desolation and a curse!   No vestige of its glory should survive   In fact or memory: its people dead,   Its site forgotten, and its very name   Disputed.'   'Was the prophecy fulfilled?'   The sullen disc of the declining sun   Was crimson with a curse and a portent,   And scarce his angry ray lit up the land   That lay below, whose lurid gloom appeared   Freaked with a moving mist, which, reeking up   From dim tarns hateful with a horrid ban,   Took shapes forbidden and without a name.   Gigantic night-birds, rising from the reeds   With cries discordant, startled all the air,   And bodiless voices babbled in the gloom.   But not to me came any voice again;   And, covering my face with thin, dead hands,   I wept, and woke, and cried aloud to God!

POLITICS.

  That land full surely hastens to its end   Where public sycophants in homage bend   The populace to flatter, and repeat   The doubled echoes of its loud conceit.   Lowly their attitude but high their aim,   They creep to eminence through paths of shame,   Till fixed securely in the seats of pow'r,   The dupes they flattered they at last devour.

POESY.

  Successive bards pursue Ambition's fire   That shines, Oblivion, above thy mire.   The latest mounts his predecessor's trunk,   And sinks his brother ere himself is sunk.   So die ingloriously Fame's elite,   But dams of dunces keep the line complete.

IN DEFENSE.

  You may say, if you please, Johnny Bull, that our girls   Are crazy to marry your dukes and your earls;   But I've heard that the maids of your own little isle   Greet bachelor lords with a favoring smile.   Nay, titles, 'tis said in defense of our fair,   Are popular here because popular there;   And for them our ladies persistently go   Because 'tis exceedingly English, you know.   Whatever the motive, you'll have to confess   The effort's attended with easy success;   And—pardon the freedom—'tis thought, over here,   'Tis mortification you mask with a sneer.   It's all very well, sir, your scorn to parade   Of the high nasal twang of the Yankee maid,   But, ah, to my lord when he dares to propose   No sound is so sweet as that 'Yes' from the nose.   Our ladies, we grant, walk alone in the street
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