Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By Ode to PeaceJohn Neal (17931876)
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Rock-hearted country of the brave and wise!
Huge fortress of the North! unfurl at length
All thy sharp streamers o’er the flashing skies
The shadow only of a coming foe,
Athwart thy bulwarks—heard the stormy swell
Of countless armies gathering below
Upwaking with a heavy solemn roar,
Thy rocks, thy rivers and thy solitudes,
And the great sea that broke upon thy shore,
Of strange artillery in the earth and sky,
Chariots and horsemen, such as God employs,
When he would startle to new energy
Child of the North—New England—Up and heave
Thy sumptuous drapery to the wind! Thy brow
Begirt with adamant, lay bare; and leave
Forth like the mightiest and the best of them
Who, if they move to grapple with a foe,
Put on a snowy robe—a diadem
And awful beauty! Let the nations hear
The language of endurance from the brave;
The song of peace from such as know not fear.
For ever and for ever bound to wage,
Like the devouring creatures of the sea,
Unceasing battle for our heritage?
With lighted thunderbolts, year after year,
Lest they who saw their monarch vail his crown
At our approach of old, may venture near?
Is put upon the casting of a die?
The land our fathers bled for—that which Thou
Regardest as a portion of the sky—
Are vast and powerful? Thy rocky earth,
Rough though it be, more precious than the lands
That burn with gold and gems? Of greater worth
Than if thy waters rang o’er beds of pearls,
Flashing and sounding with the great high sea,—
Or when their wrath was up—in drifts and whirls
The wealth of India, or the glorious coil
Of shipwreck’d empires freighted with the store
Of gone-by ages—founder’d with their spoil.
To keep for ever thundering, night and day?
Will nothing do but warfare? Must we be
Arm’d to the teeth for ever? arm’d to slay?
Our fruitage and our hope—are they to go
Not reasoning as they ought with words of truth,
Along the way of life, but arm’d as though
Were fashion’d by the Builder of the Skies,
Not for his living Image, but the dead—
A place for slaughter and for sacrifice;
Bred up to butchery from their earliest breath?
Made to believe that they are serving thee,
Our Father! when they sweep a storm of death,
Tearing a path to empire—laying bare
The Vineyards of the world, age after age,
Or clamoring with ten thousand trumpets where
With star-drift—fire—and shapes magnificent,
Creatures that watch thy roaring citadel—
The broad black sea—the sun-dropp’d firmament.
The rulers of the earth, that they should dare,
To set aside thy law—to bid man slay
Where thou, their God, hast told him to forbear?
Storehouse of nations—Lighted of the sky—
Great northern hive—Long cherish’d of the deep—
Mother of States! To thee we turn our eye!
Peace to the Nations; to our Borders peace!
Why roll your banners like a thunder-cloud,
O’er sky and earth for ever? Let war cease!
By Him that dwelleth in eternity,
That henceforth and for ever she will wear
About her warrior brow, the flowering olive-tree!