WHILE the tempest-tost mariner can but discern, His guide and his guardian, the pole-star on high; Regardless of winds and of waves, he may turn To that bright-rolling orb with a hope-beaming eye. And thus, amid Europe's convulsive commotion, We too had our planet, and brilliant its blaze; It shone o'er its own native isle of the ocean, In the proud, peerless splendour of primitive days. Oh, bright was the course of that star in our sky! Undimm'd by the clouds through which calmly it pass'd; And proud was the orbit it roll'd in on high, And holy the radiance which round it it cast. The oppress'd and the injur'd rejoic'd in its rays; The minions of power marked its progress with dread; The patriot pursued it with prayer and with praise; And lovely and loved was the lustre it shed. And though it hath suddenly sunk from our sight, And those who long watch'd it must mourn for its fall; Yet remembrance shall cling to its dawn with delight, And its noontide effulgence shall often recall. O grant that the dark cloud which veil'd its decline, In the bright beams of mercy may vanish away; And the star we have lov'd, through Eternity shine In glory immortal, which dreads no decay! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE UNPARDONABLE SIN by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY DREAM-LOVE by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI THE CRESCENT AND THE CROSS by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH AFTER YEARS by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS CHORUS OF CLOUD-MAIDENS: STROPHE, FR. THE CLOUDS by ARISTOPHANES ON A CHILD SLEEPING IN CYNTHIA'S LAP by PHILIP AYRES A CARNIVAL EPISODE by MATHILDE BLIND ON THE BIRTH OF JOHN WILLIAM RIZZO HOPPNER by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |