England! My England! can the surging sea That lies between us tear
my heart from thee? Can distant birth and distant dwelling drain
Th’ ancestral blood that warms the loyal vein? Isle of my Fathers!
hear the filial song Of him whose sources but to thee belong!
World-Conquering Mother! by thy mighty hand Was carv’d from savage
wilds my native land: Thy matchless sons the firm foundation laid;
Thy matchless arts the nascent nation made: By thy just laws the
young republic grew, And through thy greatness, kindred greatness
knew. What man that springs from thy untainted line But sees
Columbia’s virtues all as thine? Whilst nameless multitudes upon our
shore From the dim corners of creation pour, Whilst mongrel slaves
crawl hither to partake Of Saxon liberty they could not make, From
such an alien crew in grief I turn, And for the mother’s voice of
Britain burn. England! can aught remove the cherish’d chain That
binds my spirit to thy blest domain? Can Revolution’s bitter precepts
sway The soul that must the ties of race obey? Create a new
Columbia if ye will, The flesh that forms me is Britannic still!
Hail! oaken shades, and meads of dewy green, So oft in sleep, yet
ne’er in waking seen. Peal out, ye ancient chimes, from vine-clad
tower Where pray’d my fathers in a vanish’d hour: What countless
years of rev’rence can ye claim From bygone worshippers that bore my
name! Their forms are crumbling in the vaults around, Whilst I,
across the sea, but dreamthe sound. Return, Sweet Vision! Let me
glimpse again The stone-built abbey, rising o’er the plain; The
neighb’ring village with its sun-shower’d square; The shaded
mill-stream, and the forest fair, The hedge-lin’d lane, that leads to
rustic cot Where sweet contentment is the peasant’s lot: The
mystic grove, by Druid wraiths possess’d, The flow’ring fields, with
fairy-castles blest: And the old manor-house, sedate and dark, Set
in the shadows of the wooded park. Can this be dreaming? Must my
eyelids close That I may catch the fragrance of the rose? Is it in
fancy that the midnight vale Thrills with the warblings of the
nightingale? A golden moon bewitching radiance yields, And
England’s fairies trip o’er England’s fields. England! Old England! in
my love for thee No dream is mine, but blessed memory; Such
haunting images and hidden fires Course with the bounding blood of
British sires: From British bodies, minds, and souls I come, And
from them draw the vision of their home.
Awake, Columbia! scorn the vulgar age That bids
thee slight thy lordly heritage. Let not the wide Atlantic’s wildest
wave Burst the blest bonds that fav’ring Nature gave: Connecting
surges ‘twixt the nations run, Our Saxon souls dissolving into one!
|