Land of the Pilgrim’s Pride

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Land of the Pilgrim’s Pride

I dreamed, and in my dream came one who said:

“Because thou art all sullen; and because

Thou sayest thou hast not for thy country, love;

Because thou dost begrudge the foolish blood

That in the far heroic days thou didst

(Or sayst thou didst) pour from thy riven vein

In testimony to thy patriot zeal;

Because thou seekest ever to promote

Distrust of the benign and wholesome rule

Of the Majority⁠—God’s Ministers;

Because thou hearest in the People’s voice

Naught but the mandate of an idiot will

Clamoring in the wilderness, but what

Or why it knoweth not; because all this

And much beside is true, I come⁠—”

“Forbear,” I cried, “to name thine errand⁠—all

Too well I know it for the sword, the scales,

The shrouded eyes (albeit methinks I catch

A twinkle now and then beneath the band)

Speak to my conscience of a traitor’s doom!

Strike, then, but hear. To westward, roaring up

From far beyond the earth’s vast curvature,

Come sounds of discord horrible⁠—the jar

And thunder of exploding bombs;

The crackle of the flames that eat away

The means of life of those who kindle them;

The shouts and curses of the robber mob.

Drunk with a sense of numbers⁠—like the wolves,

Numerically brave⁠—on ravin bent

And murder! Hear the moans of honest men,

With shameful by-name vilified, denied

The right to earn their bread, and with a blind,

Mad cruelty the devil would weep to see,

Beaten and tortured, even by the hands

Of the barbarian’s female and his whelps!

Meanwhile the coward rulers of the land

Prate of ‘the People’s wrongs.’ The coward press

(Thrifty withal to purse a double gain

By two-faced flattery) prates like a fool

Of the conservative and saving strength

Of Anglo-Saxon institutions, or

With magic words, as ‘freedom,’ and the like,

Would conjure order from inharmony.

The land is foul with crime, and none declares

Our shame and downfall. Even the women rise

And seeing the rack and ruin men have wrought,

Strip their weak bodies with a silly zeal

Something to save from the chaotic wreck;

And in the reek and sweat of their absurd

And awkward efforts, lose even what remained⁠—

Their own morality and men’s respect.

Therefore I say to you⁠—”

“Nay say no more,”

Cried she who came into my dream, “for thou

Dost wander. What, pray, has all this to do

With what thou’rt charged with?⁠—that thou dost not love⁠—

Such as it is⁠—thy country?”

“Faith, I would,

But ’tis infested by my countrymen!”

What she replied I know not, for a bomb,

Spitting and sputtering on my chamber floor.

Awoke me and I fled into the night.