Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To Faneuil Hall by John Greenleaf Whittier
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To Faneuil Hall

    By John Greenleaf Whittier



    Men! if manhood still ye claim,
    If the Northern pulse can thrill,
    Roused by wrong or stung by shame,
    Freely, strongly still;
    Let the sounds of traffic die:
    Shut the mill-gate, leave the stall,
    Fling the axe and hammer by;
    Throng to Faneuil Hall!
    Wrongs which freemen never brooked,
    Dangers grim and fierce as they,
    Which, like couching lions, looked
    On your fathers' way;
    These your instant zeal demand,
    Shaking with their earthquake-call
    Every rood of Pilgrim land,
    Ho, to Faneuil Hall!
    From your capes and sandy bars,
    From your mountain-ridges cold,
    Through whose pines the westering stars
    Stoop their crowns of gold;
    Come, and with your footsteps wake
    Echoes from that holy wall;
    Once again, for Freedom's sake,
    Rock your fathers' hall!
    Up, and tread beneath your feet
    Every cord by party spun:
    Let your hearts together beat
    As the heart of one.
    Banks and tarrifs, stocks and trade,
    Let them rise or let them fall:
    Freedom asks your common aid,
    Up, to Faneuil Hall!
    Up, and let each voice that speaks
    Ring from thence to Southern plains,
    Sharply as the blow which breaks
    Prison-bolts and chains!
    Speak as well becomes the free:
    Dreaded more than steel or ball,
    Shall your calmest utterance be,
    Heard from Faneuil Hall!
    Have they wronged us? Let us then
    Render back nor threats nor prayers;
    Have they chained our free-born men?
    Let us unchain theirs!
    Up, your banner leads the van,
    Blazoned, "Liberty for all!"
    Finish what your sires began!
    Up, to Faneuil Hall



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