While craven cynics croak their sour despair Divine despair is fighting in Madrid. Icarian heroes ride the blazing air Of Cordova and fair Valladolid. To keep the sun of freedom in their sky Arrested at its high refulgent noon Even the children fall, and young men die Or gasp their lungless anguish to the moon. The long Atlantic, ever on the march, Coils on the cliff that thrusts against the sea, While tiny man, under his turquoise arch Mouths the magnificent cry of liberty So briefly uttered through a million wars And never reaching even the nearest stars. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CHRONICLE; A BALLAD by ABRAHAM COWLEY BALLAD OF THE WOMEN OF PARIS by FRANCOIS VILLON THE FIRST BREAK by ALEXANDER ANDERSON EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 4. THE TIMOROUS ADVENTURER by PHILIP AYRES SONNET: 19 by RICHARD BARNFIELD BUSINESS GIRLS by JOHN BETJEMAN THE INVISIBLE BRIDGE by FRANK GELETT BURGESS IN THE PLACE DE LA BASTILLE by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 3. INTO THE REGIONS OF THE SUN by EDWARD CARPENTER |