Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Sentence Of John L. Brown by John Greenleaf Whittier
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The Sentence Of John L. Brown

    By John Greenleaf Whittier



    Ho! thou who seekest late and long
    A License from the Holy Book
    For brutal lust and fiendish wrong,
    Man of the Pulpit, look!
    Lift up those cold and atheist eyes,
    This ripe fruit of thy teaching see;
    And tell us how to heaven will rise
    The incense of this sacrifice
    This blossom of the gallows tree!
    Search out for slavery's hour of need
    Some fitting text of sacred writ;
    Give heaven the credit of deed
    Which shames the nether pit.
    Kneel, smooth blasphemer, unto Him
    Whose truth is on thy lips a lie;
    Ask that His bright winged cherubim
    May bend around that scaffold grim
    To guard and bless and sanctify.
    O champion of the people's cause!
    Suspend thy loud and vain rebuke
    Of foreign wrong and Old World's laws,
    Man of the Senate, look!
    Was this the promise of the free,
    The great hope of our early time,
    That slavery's poison vine should be
    Upborne by Freedom's prayer-nursed tree
    O'erclustered with such fruits of crime?
    Send out the summons East and West,
    And South and North, let all be there
    Where he who pitied the oppressed
    Swings out in sun and air.
    Let not a Democratic hand
    The grisly hangman's task refuse;
    There let each loyal patriot stand,
    Awaiting slavery's command,
    To twist the rope and draw the noose!
    But vain is irony unmeet
    Its cold rebuke for deeds which start
    In fiery and indignant beat
    The pulses of the heart.
    Leave studied wit and guarded phrase
    For those who think but do not feel;
    Let men speak out in words which raise
    Where'er they fall, an answering blaze
    Like flints which strike the fire from steel.
    Still let a mousing priesthood ply
    Their garbled text and gloss of sin,
    And make the lettered scroll deny
    Its living soul within:
    Still let the place-fed, titled knave
    Plead robbery's right with purchased lips,
    And tell us that our fathers gave
    For Freedom's pedestal, a slave,
    The frieze and moulding, chains and whips!
    But ye who own that Higher Law
    Whose tablets in the heart are set,
    Speak out in words of power and awe
    That God is living yet!
    Breathe forth once more those tones sublime
    Which thrilled the burdened prophet's lyre,
    And in a dark and evil time
    Smote down on Israel's fast of crime
    And gift of blood, a rain of fire!
    Oh, not for us the graceful lay
    To whose soft measures lightly move
    The footsteps of the faun and fay,
    O'er-locked by mirth and love!
    But such a stern and startling strain
    As Britain's hunted bards flung down
    From Snowden to the conquered plain,
    Where harshly clanked the Saxon chain,
    On trampled field and smoking town.
    By Liberty's dishonored name,
    By man's lost hope and failing trust,
    By words and deeds which bow with shame
    Our foreheads to the dust,
    By the exulting strangers' sneer,
    Borne to us from the Old World's thrones,
    And by their victims' grief who hear,
    In sunless mines and dungeons drear,
    How Freedom's land her faith disowns!
    Speak out in acts. The time for words
    Has passed, and deeds suffice alone;
    In vain against the clang of swords
    The wailing pipe is blown!
    Act, act in God's name, while ye may!
    Smite from the church her leprous limb!
    Throw open to the light of day.
    The bondman's cell, and break away
    The chains the state has bound on him!
    Ho! every true and living soul,
    To Freedom's perilled altar bear
    The Freeman's and the Christian's whole
    Tongue, pen, and vote, and prayer!
    One last, great battle for the right
    One short, sharp struggle to be free!
    To do is to succeed our fight
    Is waged in Heaven's approving sight;
    The smile of God is Victory



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