Yet our Elizabeth stood out alone, Shielding the faith - though tarnished thus with crime, When any darkness fell upon the time, She heard the Jesuit's foot steal near the throne; When man and nature felt the advancing stress Of that great armament, her mighty soul Quailed not, and England from her steadfastness Took heart - right-royal was her self-control; Thames held his state; bold headlands of the coast Sent winds to chafe the foe, that, hinting wreck, Puft at each tilting prow and tower'd deck, Till fuller tempests squander'd all their host, And, like a pack that overruns the scent, Far to the north their scurrying vessels went! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 35 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING ODE TO THE CUCKOO by MICHAEL BRUCE PALINODE; AUTUMN by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL PROMETHEUS by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL DORIS; A PASTORAL by ARTHUR JOSEPH MUNBY THE SAILOR'S WIFE by JEAN ADAMS ROMANCE by MAXWELL STRUTHERS BURT TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. A DREAM OF HUMAN LIFE by EDWARD CARPENTER |