Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Miscellaneous Poems. I. Englands DeadFelicia Dorothea Hemans (17931835)
S
Where sleep your mighty dead?
Show me what high and stately pile
Is reared o’er Glory’s bed.
Free, free the white sail spread!
Wave may not foam, nor wild wind sweep,
Where rest not England’s dead.
By the pyramid o’erswayed,
With fearful power the noonday reigns,
And the palm-trees yield no shade;—
From heaven look fiercely red,
Unfelt by those whose task is done!—
There slumber England’s dead.
Along the Indian shore,
And far by Ganges’ banks at night
Is heard the tiger’s roar;—
It hath no tone of dread
For those that from their toils are gone,—
There slumber England’s dead.
The Western wilds among,
And free, in green Columbia’s woods,
The hunter’s bow is strung;—
Let the arrow’s flight be sped!
Why should they reck whose task is done?—
There slumber England’s dead.
In the snowy Pyrenees,
And toss the pine-boughs through the sky
Like rose-leaves on the breeze;—
Let the fresh wreaths be shed!
For the Roncesvalles’ field is won,—
There slumber England’s dead.
’Tis a dark and dreadful hour,
When round the ship the ice-fields close,
And the northern night-clouds lour;—
Let the cold-blue desert spread!
Their course with mast and flag is done,—
Even there sleep England’s dead.
The men of field and wave!
Are not the rocks their funeral piles,
The seas and shores their grave?
Free, free the white sail spread!
Wave may not foam, nor wild wind sweep,
Where rest not England’s dead.