Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Ein Feste Burg ist Unser Gott - (Luther’s Hymn) by John Greenleaf Whittier
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Ein Feste Burg ist Unser Gott - (Luther’s Hymn)

    By John Greenleaf Whittier



    We wait beneath the furnace-blast
    The pangs of transformation;
    Not painlessly doth God recast
    And mould anew the nation.
    Hot burns the fire
    Where wrongs expire;
    Nor spares the hand
    That from the land
    Uproots the ancient evil.

    The hand-breadth cloud the sages feared
    Its bloody rain is dropping;
    The poison plant the fathers spared
    All else is overtopping.
    East, West, South, North,
    It curses the earth;
    All justice dies,
    And fraud and lies
    Live only in its shadow.

    What gives the wheat-field blades of steel?
    What points the rebel cannon?
    What sets the roaring rabble’s heel
    On the old star-spangled pennon?
    What breaks the oath
    Of the men o’ the South?
    What whets the knife
    For the Union’s life?
    Hark to the answer: Slavery!

    Then waste no blows on lesser foes
    In strife unworthy freemen.
    God lifts to-day the veil, and shows
    The features of the demon
    O North and South,
    Its victims both,
    Can ye not cry,
    “Let slavery die!”
    And union find in freedom?

    What though the cast-out spirit tear
    The nation in his going?
    We who have shared the guilt must share
    The pang of his o’erthrowing!
    Whate’er the loss,
    Whate’er the cross,
    Shall they complain
    Of present pain
    Who trust in God’s hereafter?

    For who that leans on His right arm
    Was ever yet forsaken?
    What righteous cause can suffer harm
    If He its part has taken?
    Though wild and loud,
    And dark the cloud,
    Behind its folds
    His hand upholds
    The calm sky of to-morrow!

    Above the maddening cry for blood,
    Above the wild war-drumming,
    Let Freedom’s voice be heard, with good
    The evil overcoming.
    Give prayer and purse
    To stay the Curse
    Whose wrong we share,
    Whose shame we bear,
    Whose end shall gladden Heaven!

    In vain the bells of war shall ring
    Of triumphs and revenges,
    While still is spared the evil thing
    That severs and estranges.
    But blest the ear
    That yet shall hear
    The jubilant bell
    That rings the knell
    Of Slavery forever!

    Then let the selfish lip be dumb,
    And hushed the breath of sighing;
    Before the joy of peace must come
    The pains of purifying.
    God give us grace
    Each in his place
    To bear his lot,
    And, murmuring not,
    Endure and wait and labor!



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