HO, thou of the hate that shall deathless be! Thou hast called to us, and we answer thee. Flung forth is our Word, where the green swells shine Through the whirling scud of the wind-whipt brine: @3To our hand, restored Are the targe and sword; In our sails scream the gulls of the sea.@1 Of Love and of Hate we have naught to say: No oath is pledged at our hearths today; The morrow we leave to our spume-dashed keel, And the shadowy edge of our undimmed steel. On the bounds of the world Is a flag unfurled, And a nation addressed to the fray. We have lifted our eyes to the muffled morn, And the wasting flood of a moon outworn; We have marked the pale pressage astir on high, That speaks to the living, who shortly die. Yet our name is old As the surges cold, And our sires to the paean were born. Nothing have we with the humbled knee, The shame of the freeman, no longer free; And our Word shall abide, yield it honor or woe, The same to the new, as the ancient foe: @3To our hand, restored Are the targe and sword; In our sails scream the gulls of the sea.@1 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DEVIL'S WALK [ON EARTH] by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE EPISTLE TO ROBERT GRAHAM OF FINTRY (2) by ROBERT BURNS ON THE DISINTERESTED LOVE OF GOD (2) by JOHN BYROM OBSERVATIONS IN THE ART OF ENGLISH POESY: 8. TROCHAIC VERSE: THE FOURTH EPIGRAM by THOMAS CAMPION LINES ADDRESSED TO DR. DARWIN; AUTHOR OF THE BOTANIC GARDEN by WILLIAM COWPER THE LOVE OF THE WORLD REPROVED; OR, HYPOCRISY DETECTED by WILLIAM COWPER SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD: 4. THE TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE by CHRISTOPHER PEARSE CRANCH |