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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ANARCHY; PARIS, FEBRUARY 5, 1894, by LEWIS MORRIS (1833-1907) Poet's Biography First Line: The night is blinded with rain Last Line: "that they killed marie antoinette." Subject(s): Anarchism And Anarchists; French Revolution (1789) | |||
PARIS, FEBRUARY 5, 1894. THE night is blinded with rain, No light in the casements is seen; Thro' the blank streets, long before dawn, Rolls the van with the guillotine. Save the quick stroke of hammers alone, With their petulant hurry of sound, There is scarcely a murmur that comes From the sullen groups lingering round; For the sombre toilers who go To their task, ere the day has risen, Tarry silently on their way Before the grim walls of the prison. Till at last all is ready, and see! The black scaffold frowning on high, Where before the sun rises to-day On the fair town, a felon shall die. All is silent, till sudden there bursts On the stillness a roystering crowd, Reeling forth from their dens of the night, With coarse jests and with blasphemies loud. Gay masquers of Carnival-time, Ghastly - cheeked, crimson - lipped, hollow-eyed, Roughed harlots, mock-Churchmen, a swarm Of the reckless on every side. But as to the scaffold they press, Something strikes that lewd populace dumb, As swift from the gates of the gaol They behold the fierce criminal come. Very pale and erect, unafraid, With firm paces and regular breath, This priest of a murderous creed Goes calm as a martyr to death. "Long live Anarchy! Death to the State! And you bourgeois!" No penitent word. But a deep silence broods o'er the crowd; Not a cry, scarce a murmur is heard. Then the masquers go wearily home, And the corpse to the surgeons. And yet A voice cries, "'Twas a century since That they killed Marie Antoinette." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FRANCE: AN ODE by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE LOUIS XV by JOHN STERLING (1806-1844) FRENCH REVOLUTION; AS IT APPEARED TO ENTHUSIASTS AT ITS COMMENCEMENT by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH LINES WRITTEN ... ONE WHO HAD WATCHED .. AMERICAN & FRENCH REVOLUTIONS by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES THE FRENCH REVOLUTION by WILLIAM BLAKE VERSAILLES (1784) by STOPFORD AUGUSTUS BROOKE THE MIDNIGHT MASS; AN INCIDENT OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION by ADA CAMBRIDGE AN ODE ON THE DESTRUCTION OF THE BASTILE by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE TALLEYRAND TO LORD GRENVILLE; A METRICAL EPISTLE by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE A CAROL by LEWIS MORRIS (1833-1907) |
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