Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Giant In Glee. by Victor-Marie Hugo
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The Giant In Glee.

    By Victor-Marie Hugo



    ("Ho, guerriers! je suis né dans le pays des Gaules.")

    [V., March 11, 1825.]


    Ho, warriors! I was reared in the land of the Gauls;
    O'er the Rhine my ancestors came bounding like balls
    Of the snow at the Pole, where, a babe, I was bathed
    Ere in bear and in walrus-skin I was enswathed.

    Then my father was strong, whom the years lowly bow, -
    A bison could wallow in the grooves of his brow.
    He is weak, very old - he can scarcely uptear
    A young pine-tree for staff since his legs cease to bear;

    But here's to replace him! - I can toy with his axe;
    As I sit on the hill my feet swing in the flax,
    And my knee caps the boulders and troubles the trees.
    How they shiver, yea, quake if I happen to sneeze!

    I was still but a springald when, cleaving the Alps,
    I brushed snowy periwigs off granitic scalps,
    And my head, o'er the pinnacles, stopped the fleet clouds,
    Where I captured the eagles and caged them by crowds.

    There were tempests! I blew them back into their source!
    And put out their lightnings! More than once in a course,
    Through the ocean I went wading after the whale,
    And stirred up the bottom as did never a gale.

    Fond of rambling, I hunted the shark 'long the beach,
    And no osprey in ether soared out of my reach;
    And the bear that I pinched 'twixt my finger and thumb,
    Like the lynx and the wolf, perished harmless and dumb.

    But these pleasures of childhood have lost all their zest;
    It is warfare and carnage that now I love best:
    The sounds that I wish to awaken and hear
    Are the cheers raised by courage, the shrieks due to fear;

    When the riot of flames, ruin, smoke, steel and blood,
    Announces an army rolls along as a flood,
    Which I follow, to harry the clamorous ranks,
    Sharp-goading the laggards and pressing the flanks,
    Till, a thresher 'mid ripest of corn, up I stand
    With an oak for a flail in my unflagging hand.

    Rise the groans! rise the screams! on my feet fall vain tears
    As the roar of my laughter redoubles their fears.
    I am naked. At armor of steel I should joke -
    True, I'm helmed - a brass pot you could draw with ten yoke.

    I look for no ladder to invade the king's hall -
    I stride o'er the ramparts, and down the walls fall,
    Till choked are the ditches with the stones, dead and quick,
    Whilst the flagstaff I use 'midst my teeth as a pick.

    Oh, when cometh my turn to succumb like my prey,
    May brave men my body snatch away from th' array
    Of the crows - may they heap on the rocks till they loom
    Like a mountain, befitting a colossus' tomb!

    Foreign Quarterly Review (adapted)



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