Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Republic by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Republic

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I.

    Not they the great
    Who build authority around a State,
    And firm on calumny and party hate
    Base their ambition. Nor the great are they
    Who with disturbance make their way,
    Mindful of but to-day
    And individual ends that so compel
    They know not what they do, yet do it well.
    Butthey the great.
    Who sacrifice their honor for the State
    And set their seal
    Upon the writing, consecrate,
    Of time and fate,
    That says, "He suffered for a People's weal:
    Or, calm of soul and eye,
    Helped to eliminate
    The Madness that makes Progress its wild cry,
    And for its policy
    Self, a divinity,
    That on illusions thrives,
    And knows not whither its desire drives
    Till on the rocks its headlong vessel rives."

II.

    God of the wise,
    On whom the People wait,
    And who at last all evils wilt abate,
    Make Thou more keen men's eyes:
    Let them behold how Thou at length wilt bring,
    From turmoil and confusion now that cling
    About the Nation's feet,
    Order and calm and peace
    With harmony of purpose, wing to wing
    As out of Chaos sprang
    Light and its co-mate, Law, when loud Thy summons rang
    High instruments of power never to cease,
    Spirits of destiny,
    Who from their lofty seat
    Shall put down hate and strife's insanity,
    And all contentions old that eat
    The country to the quick:
    And Common-Sense, the Lion-Heart now sick,
    Forth from his dungeon cell
    Go free,
    With Song, his bold Blondél;
    And, stretching forth a stalwart arm
    To laboring land and sea,
    With his glad coming warm
    The land to one accord, one sympathy
    Of soul; whose strength shall stand
    For something more than gold to all the land,
    Making more sure the ties
    Of freedom and equality
    And Progress; who, unto the watchful skies,
    Unfurls his banner and, with challenging hand,
    Leads on the world's emprise.

III.

    God of the just and wise,
    Behold! why is it that our mortal eyes
    Are not more open to the good that lies
    Around our feet? the blessings in disguise
    That go with us about our daily deeds
    Attending all our needs?
    Why is it that, so rich and prodigal,
    We will complain
    Of Nature her whose liberal hand,
    Summer and spring and fall,
    Pours out abundance on the Land?
    Cotton and oil and grain
    O God, make men more sane!
    Help them to understand
    And trust in her who never failed her due;
    Who never camped with Famine and his crew
    Or made ally
    Of the wild House of old Calamity!
    But always faithfully,
    Year after generous year,
    From forth her barque of plenty, stanch of sail,
    Poured big abundance. What did lies avail,
    Or what did fear
    To make her largess fail? They who descry,
    Raising a hue and cry,
    Disaster's Harpies darkening the sky
    Each month that comes and goes, are they not less
    Of insight than the beasts of hill and field,
    Who take no worry, knowing Earth will yield
    Her usual harvest a sufficiency
    For all and more; yea, even enough to bless
    The sons of Greed, who make a market of lies
    And blacken blessings unto credulous eyes,
    Turning them curses, till on every hand
    They see, as Speculation sees,
    God's benefactions rain, and sun, and snow
    Working destruction in the land,
    The camping-ground of old hostilities,
    Changing all joy to woe
    With visitations of her wrath withal,
    Proclaiming her, our mother Nature, foe
    Undeviating, to our hopes below
    Nature, who never yet has failed to bless us all.

IV.

    By the long leagues of cotton Texas rolls,
    And Mississippi bolls;
    By the wide seas of wheat
    The far Dakotas beat
    Against the barriers of the mountainland:
    And by the miles of maize
    Nebraska lays
    Like a vast carpet in
    Her House of Nights and Days,
    Where, glittering, in council meet
    The Spirits of the Cold and Heat,
    With old Fertility whose heart they win:
    By all the wealth replete
    Within our scan,
    From Florida to where the snows begin,
    Made manifest of Nature unto Man
    Behold!
    The Land is as a mighty scroll unrolled,
    Whereon God writes His name
    In harvest: green and gold
    And russet making fair as oft of old
    Each dædal part He decorates the same
    With splendors manifold
    Of mountains and of rivers, fruits and flowers;
    Sealing each passage of the rubric Hours
    With esoteric powers
    Of life and love, and all their mystery,
    Through which men yet may see
    The truth that shall refute the fool that cries,
    "God has forgot us and our great emprise!"

V.

    Of elemental mold
    God made our Country, wombing her with gold
    And veining her with copper, iron, and coal.
    Making her strong for her appointed goal.
    High on her eagled peaks His rainbow gleams
    Its mighty message: in her mountain streams
    His voice is heard: and on the wind and rain
    Ride Potencies
    And Portents of His purpose, while she dreams
    Of great achievements, great activities,
    And, weariless of brain,
    From plain to busy plain,
    And peak to plateau, with unresting hand,
    Along the laboring land,
    She speeds swift train on train,
    Feeling the urge in her of energies,
    That bear her business on
    From jubilant dawn to dawn,
    From where the snow makes dumb
    Alaskan heights, to where, like hives of bees,
    The prairies hum
    With cities; while around her girdling seas
    Ships go and come,
    Servants and slaves of her vast industries.

VI.

    And He, who sits above,
    And, watching, sees
    Her dreams become great actualities,
    Out of His love
    Will He continue to bestow
    Blessings upon her, even more and more,
    Until their store
    Shall pass the count of all the dreams we know?
    Why heed
    The sordid souls that worship Greed?
    The vampire lives that feed,
    Feast and grow fat
    On what they name the Proletariat;
    Wringing with blood and sweat,
    From forth the nation's muscle, heart, and brain,
    The strength that keeps her sane:
    They, too, shall have their day and cease to be.
    Ignoble souls, who, for a market, set
    Before the People's eyes
    A scarecrow train
    Of fabrications, rumors, antic lies
    Of havoc and calamity,
    Panic appearances of Famine, War,
    That for the moment bar
    The path of Truth and work their selfish gain.

VII.

    God of the simple and the wise,
    Grant us more light; and lead
    The great adventure to its mighty end!
    From Thy o'erarching skies
    Still give us heed,
    And make more clear the way that onward lies.
    Not wealth now is her need,
    The great Republic's, Wealth, the child of Greed,
    Nay, nay! O God, but for the dream we plead,
    The dream as well as deed,
    The Dream of Beauty which shall so descend
    From Thee, and with her inmost being blend,
    That it shall help her cause
    More than all temporal laws. . . .

VIII.

    Now, for her soul's increase,
    And spirit's peace,
    Curb the bright dæmon Speed;
    Grant her release
    From strife; and let the joy that springs
    From love of lowly things
    Possess her soul and plead
    For work that counts for something to the heart,
    And grows immortal part
    Of life the work called Art;
    And let Love lead
    Her softly all her days; with quiet hand
    Sowing the fruitful land
    With spiritual seed
    Of wisdom from which blossoms shall expand
    Of vital beauty, and her fame increase
    More than the wealth of all the centuries.

IX.

    God of the wise,
    The meek and humble, who still look to Thee,
    Holding to sanity
    And truth and purpose of the great emprise,
    Keep her secure,
    And beautiful and pure
    As when in ages past Thou didst devise,
    Saying within Thy heart, "She shall endure!
    A great Republic!" Let her course be sure,
    O God, and, in detraction's spite,
    Unquestionably right;
    And in the night,
    If night there must be, light a beacon light
    To guide her safely through the strife,
    The conflict of her soul, with passions rife.
    Oh, raise some man of might,
    Whose mind shall put down storm and stress of life,
    And kindle anew the lamp whose light shall burn,
    A Pharos, in the storms,
    That shall arise and with confusion shake
    Foundations of the walls of Civilization:
    A pillar of flame, behold,
    Like that of old,
    Which Israel followed and its bondage brake,
    Leading each night-lost Nation
    To refuge in her arms,
    Freedom's, away from all the Tyrannies
    Of all the Centuries,
    Safe on her heart to learn
    To hush its heart's alarms.



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