Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Cromwell's Statue1 by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Cromwell's Statue1

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    What needs our Cromwell stone or bronze to say
    His was the light that lit on England's way
    The sundawn of her time-compelling power,
    The noontide of her most imperial day?
    His hand won back the sea for England's dower;
    His footfall bade the Moor change heart and cower;
    His word on Milton's tongue spake law to France
    When Piedmont felt the she-wolf Rome devour.
    From Cromwell's eyes the light of England's glance
    Flashed, and bowed down the kings by grace of chance,
    The priest-anointed princes; one alone
    By grace of England held their hosts in trance.
    The enthroned Republic from her kinglier throne
    Spake, and her speech was Cromwell's. Earth has known
    No lordlier presence. How should Cromwell stand
    With kinglets and with queenlings hewn in stone?
    Incarnate England in his warrior hand
    Smote, and as fire devours the blackening brand
    Made ashes of their strengths who wrought her wrong,
    And turned the strongholds of her foes to sand.
    His praise is in the sea's and Milton's song;
    What praise could reach him from the weakling throng
    That rules by leave of tongues whose praise is shame
    Him, who made England out of weakness strong?
    There needs no clarion's blast of broad-blown fame
    To bid the world bear witness whence he came
    Who bade fierce Europe fawn at England's heel
    And purged the plague of lineal rule with flame.
    There needs no witness graven on stone or steel
    For one whose work bids fame bow down and kneel;
    Our man of men, whose time-commanding name
    Speaks England, and proclaims her Commonweal.



Extra Info:
June 20, 1895.

1. Refused by the party of reaction and disunion in the House of Commons on the 17th of June, 1895.


From "A Channel Passage and Other Poems"


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