Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Commonweal by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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The Commonweal

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



I
    Eight hundred years and twenty-one
    Have shone and sunken since the land
    Whose name is freedom bore such brand
    As marks a captive, and the sun
    Beheld her fettered hand.

II
    But ere dark time had shed as rain
    Or sown on sterile earth as seed
    That bears no fruit save tare and weed
    An age and half an age again,
    She rose on Runnymede.

III
    Out of the shadow, starlike still,
    She rose up radiant in her right,
    And spake, and put to fear and flight
    The lawless rule of awless will
    That pleads no right save might.

IV
    Nor since hath England ever borne
    The burden laid on subject lands,
    The rule that curbs and binds all hands
    Save one, and marks for servile scorn
    The heads it bows and brands.

V
    A commonweal arrayed and crowned
    With gold and purple, girt with steel
    At need, that foes must fear or feel,
    We find her, as our fathers found,
    Earth's lordliest commonweal.

VI
    And now that fifty years are flown
    Since in a maiden's hand the sign
    Of empire that no seas confine
    First as a star to seaward shone,
    We see their record shine.

VII
    A troubled record, foul and fair,
    A simple record and serene,
    Inscribes for praise a blameless queen,
    For praise and blame an age of care
    And change and ends unseen.

VIII
    Hope, wide of eye and wild of wing,
    Rose with the sundawn of a reign
    Whose grace should make the rough ways plain,
    And fill the worn old world with spring,
    And heal its heart of pain.

IX
    Peace was to be on earth; men's hope
    Was holier than their fathers had,
    Their wisdom not more wise than glad:
    They saw the gates of promise ope,
    And heard what love's lips bade.

X
    Love armed with knowledge, winged and wise,
    Should hush the wind of war, and see,
    They said, the sun of days to be
    Bring round beneath serener skies
    A stormless jubilee.

XI
    Time, in the darkness unbeholden
    That hides him from the sight of fear
    And lets but dreaming hope draw near,
    Smiled and was sad to hear such golden
    Strains hail the all-golden year.

XII
    Strange clouds have risen between, and wild
    Red stars of storm that lit the abyss
    Wherein fierce fraud and violence kiss
    And mock such promise as beguiled
    The fiftieth year from this.

XIII
    War upon war, change after change,
    Hath shaken thrones and towers to dust,
    And hopes austere and faiths august
    Have watched in patience stern and strange
    Men's works unjust and just.

XIV
    As from some Alpine watch-tower's portal
    Night, living yet, looks forth for dawn,
    So from time's mistier mountain lawn
    The spirit of man, in trust immortal,
    Yearns toward a hope withdrawn.

XV
    The morning comes not, yet the night
    Wanes, and men's eyes win strength to see
    Where twilight is, where light shall be
    When conquered wrong and conquering right
    Acclaim a world set free.

XVI
    Calm as our mother-land, the mother
    Of faith and freedom, pure and wise,
    Keeps watch beneath unchangeful skies,
    When hath she watched the woes of other
    Strange lands with alien eyes?

XVII
    Calm as she stands alone, what nation
    Hath lacked an alms from English hands?
    What exiles from what stricken lands
    Have lacked the shelter of the station
    Where higher than all she stands?

XVIII
    Though time discrown and change dismantle
    The pride of thrones and towers that frown,
    How should they bring her glories down—
    The sea cast round her like a mantle,
    The sea-cloud like a crown?

XIX
    The sea, divine as heaven and deathless,
    Is hers, and none but only she
    Hath learnt the sea's word, none but we
    Her children hear in heart the breathless
    Bright watchword of the sea.

XX
    Heard not of others, or misheard
    Of many a land for many a year,
    The watchword Freedom fails not here
    Of hearts that witness if the word
    Find faith in England's ear.

XXI
    She, first to love the light, and daughter
    Incarnate of the northern dawn,
    She, round whose feet the wild waves fawn
    When all their wrath of warring water
    Sounds like a babe's breath drawn,

XXII
    How should not she best know, love best,
    And best of all souls understand
    The very soul of freedom, scanned
    Far off, sought out in darkling quest
    By men at heart unmanned?

XXIII
    They climb and fall, ensnared, enshrouded,
    By mists of words and toils they set
    To take themselves, till fierce regret
    Grows mad with shame, and all their clouded
    Red skies hang sunless yet.

XXIV
    But us the sun, not wholly risen
    Nor equal now for all, illumes
    With more of light than cloud that looms;
    Of light that leads forth souls from prison
    And breaks the seals of tombs.

XXV
    Did not her breasts who reared us rear
    Him who took heaven in hand, and weighed
    Bright world with world in balance laid?
    What Newton's might could make not clear
    Hath Darwin's might not made?

XXVI
    The forces of the dark dissolve,
    The doorways of the dark are broken:
    The word that casts out night is spoken,
    And whence the springs of things evolve
    Light born of night bears token.

XXVII
    She, loving light for light's sake only,
    And truth for only truth's, and song
    For song's sake and the sea's, how long
    Hath she not borne the world her lonely
    Witness of right and wrong?

XXVIII
    From light to light her eyes imperial
    Turn, and require the further light,
    More perfect than the sun's in sight,
    Till star and sun seem all funereal
    Lamps of the vaulted night.

XXIX
    She gazes till the strenuous soul
    Within the rapture of her eyes
    Creates or bids awake, arise,
    The light she looks for, pure and whole
    And worshipped of the wise.

XXX
    Such sons are hers, such radiant hands
    Have borne abroad her lamp of old,
    Such mouths of honey-dropping gold
    Have sent across all seas and lands
    Her fame as music rolled.

XXXI
    As music made of rolling thunder
    That hurls through heaven its heart sublime,
    Its heart of joy, in charging chime,
    So ring the songs that round and under
    Her temple surge and climb.

XXXII
    A temple not by men's hands builded,
    But moulded of the spirit, and wrought
    Of passion and imperious thought;
    With light beyond all sunlight gilded,
    Whereby the sun seems nought.

XXXIII
    Thy shrine, our mother, seen for fairer
    Than even thy natural face, made fair
    With kisses of thine April air
    Even now, when spring thy banner-bearer
    Took up thy sign to bear;

XXXIV
    Thine annual sign from heaven's own arch
    Given of the sun's hand into thine,
    To rear and cheer each wildwood shrine
    But now laid waste by wild-winged March,
    March, mad with wind like wine.

XXXV
    From all thy brightening downs whereon
    The windy seaward whin-flower shows
    Blossom whose pride strikes pale the rose
    Forth is the golden watchword gone
    Whereat the world's face glows.

XXXVI
    Thy quickening woods rejoice and ring
    Till earth seems glorious as the sea:
    With yearning love too glad for glee
    The world's heart quivers toward the spring
    As all our hearts toward thee.

XXXVII
    Thee, mother, thee, our queen, who givest
    Assurance to the heavens most high
    And earth whereon her bondsmen sigh
    That by the sea's grace while thou livest
    Hope shall not wholly die.

XXXVIII
    That while thy free folk hold the van
    Of all men, and the sea-spray shed
    As dew more heavenly on thy head
    Keeps bright thy face in sight of man,
    Man's pride shall drop not dead.

XXXIX
    A pride more pure than humblest prayer,
    More wise than wisdom born of doubt,
    Girds for thy sake men's hearts about
    With trust and triumph that despair
    And fear may cast not out.

XL
    Despair may wring men's hearts, and fear
    Bow down their heads to kiss the dust,
    Where patriot memories rot and rust,
    And change makes faint a nation's cheer,
    And faith yields up her trust.

XLI
    Not here this year have true men known,
    Not here this year may true men know,
    That brand of shame-compelling woe
    Which bids but brave men shrink or groan
    And lays but honour low.

XLII
    The strong spring wind blows notes of praise,
    And hallowing pride of heart, and cheer
    Unchanging, toward all true men here
    Who hold the trust of ancient days
    High as of old this year.


XLIII
    The days that made thee great are dead;
    The days that now must keep thee great
    Lie not in keeping of thy fate;
    In thine they lie, whose heart and head
    Sustain thy charge of state.

XLIV
    No state so proud, no pride so just,
    The sun, through clouds at sunrise curled
    Or clouds across the sunset whirled,
    Hath sight of, nor has man such trust
    As thine in all the world.

XLV
    Each hour that sees the sunset's crest
    Make bright thy shores ere day decline
    Sees dawn the sun on shores of thine,
    Sees west as east and east as west
    On thee their sovereign shine.

XLVI
    The sea's own heart must needs wax proud
    To have borne the world a child like thee.
    What birth of earth might ever be
    Thy sister? Time, a wandering cloud,
    Is sunshine on thy sea.

XLVII
    Change mars not her; and thee, our mother,
    What change that irks or moves thee mars?
    What shock that shakes? what chance that jars?
    Time gave thee, as he gave none other,
    A station like a star's.

XLVIII
    The storm that shrieks, the wind that wages
    War with the wings of hopes that climb
    Too high toward heaven in doubt sublime,
    Assail not thee, approved of ages
    The towering crown of time.

XLIX
    Toward thee this year thy children turning
    With souls uplift of changeless cheer
    Salute with love that casts out fear,
    With hearts for beacons round thee burning,
    The token of this year.

L
    With just and sacred jubilation
    Let earth sound answer to the sea
    For witness, blown on winds as free,
    How England, how her crowning nation,
    Acclaims this jubilee.



Extra Info:
From "Poems and Ballads (Third Series)
Taken from The Collected Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne—Vol. III"


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