Vergniaud in the Tumbril

Vergniaud in the Tumbril

ITHE wheels are silent, the cords are slack,The terrible faces are surging back.France, they too love thee! bid that keep plain;The wrath and carnage I stayed afarColleagues of my white conscience are:Accept my slayers, accept me slain!Shed for days, in its olden guiseThe quiet delicate snake-skin liesTo cheat a boy on his woodland stroll:What if he crush it? Others seeBeauty’s miracle under a treeSupple in mail, and adroit, and whole;The shaper rid of a shape, and thence(Growth of an outgrown excellence),Mounted with infinite might and speed,Freed like a soul to the heaven it dreamed;Over life that was, and death that seemedA victory and a revenge indeed!As the serpent moves to the open spring,The while a mock, a delusive thingSole in sight of the crowd may be,So ye, my martyrs, arise, advance!For what is left at the feet of FranceIt is our failure, it is not we.IINot to ourselves our strength we brought:Inexpiable the Hand that wroughtIn us the ruin of no redress,The storm, the effort, the pang, the fire,The premonition, the vast desire,The primal passion of righteousness!Scarce by the pitiful thwarted plan,The haste, or the studious fears of manDrawing a discord from best delight,The measure is meted of God most wise;Nor the future, with her adjusted eyes,Shall speak us false in our dying fight.But e’en to me now some use is clearIn the builded truth down-beaten hereFor any along the way to spurn,Since ever our broken task may standDisaster’s college in one saved land,Whence many a stripling state shall learn.Out of the human shoots the divine:Be the Republic our only sign,For whose life’s glory our lives have beenAmbassadors on a noble wayTempest-driven, and sent astrayThe first and the final good between.Close to the vision undestroyed,The hope not compassed and yet not void,We perish so; but the world shall markOn the hilltop of our work we died,With joy of the groom before the bride,With a dawn-cry thro’ the battle’s dark.IIIO last save me on the scaffold’s round!Take heart, that after a thirst profoundThe cup of delicious death is near,And whoso hold it, or whence it flow,O drink it to France, to France! and knowFor the gift thou givest, thou hast her tear.True seed thou wert of the sunnier hour,Honorable, and burst to flowerLate in a hell-pit poison-walled:Farewell, mortality lopped and pale,Thou body that wast my friend! and Hail,Dear spirit already!... My name is called.

ITHE wheels are silent, the cords are slack,The terrible faces are surging back.France, they too love thee! bid that keep plain;The wrath and carnage I stayed afarColleagues of my white conscience are:Accept my slayers, accept me slain!Shed for days, in its olden guiseThe quiet delicate snake-skin liesTo cheat a boy on his woodland stroll:What if he crush it? Others seeBeauty’s miracle under a treeSupple in mail, and adroit, and whole;The shaper rid of a shape, and thence(Growth of an outgrown excellence),Mounted with infinite might and speed,Freed like a soul to the heaven it dreamed;Over life that was, and death that seemedA victory and a revenge indeed!As the serpent moves to the open spring,The while a mock, a delusive thingSole in sight of the crowd may be,So ye, my martyrs, arise, advance!For what is left at the feet of FranceIt is our failure, it is not we.IINot to ourselves our strength we brought:Inexpiable the Hand that wroughtIn us the ruin of no redress,The storm, the effort, the pang, the fire,The premonition, the vast desire,The primal passion of righteousness!Scarce by the pitiful thwarted plan,The haste, or the studious fears of manDrawing a discord from best delight,The measure is meted of God most wise;Nor the future, with her adjusted eyes,Shall speak us false in our dying fight.But e’en to me now some use is clearIn the builded truth down-beaten hereFor any along the way to spurn,Since ever our broken task may standDisaster’s college in one saved land,Whence many a stripling state shall learn.Out of the human shoots the divine:Be the Republic our only sign,For whose life’s glory our lives have beenAmbassadors on a noble wayTempest-driven, and sent astrayThe first and the final good between.Close to the vision undestroyed,The hope not compassed and yet not void,We perish so; but the world shall markOn the hilltop of our work we died,With joy of the groom before the bride,With a dawn-cry thro’ the battle’s dark.IIIO last save me on the scaffold’s round!Take heart, that after a thirst profoundThe cup of delicious death is near,And whoso hold it, or whence it flow,O drink it to France, to France! and knowFor the gift thou givest, thou hast her tear.True seed thou wert of the sunnier hour,Honorable, and burst to flowerLate in a hell-pit poison-walled:Farewell, mortality lopped and pale,Thou body that wast my friend! and Hail,Dear spirit already!... My name is called.

I

THE wheels are silent, the cords are slack,The terrible faces are surging back.France, they too love thee! bid that keep plain;

THE wheels are silent, the cords are slack,

The terrible faces are surging back.

France, they too love thee! bid that keep plain;

The wrath and carnage I stayed afarColleagues of my white conscience are:Accept my slayers, accept me slain!

The wrath and carnage I stayed afar

Colleagues of my white conscience are:

Accept my slayers, accept me slain!

Shed for days, in its olden guiseThe quiet delicate snake-skin liesTo cheat a boy on his woodland stroll:

Shed for days, in its olden guise

The quiet delicate snake-skin lies

To cheat a boy on his woodland stroll:

What if he crush it? Others seeBeauty’s miracle under a treeSupple in mail, and adroit, and whole;

What if he crush it? Others see

Beauty’s miracle under a tree

Supple in mail, and adroit, and whole;

The shaper rid of a shape, and thence(Growth of an outgrown excellence),Mounted with infinite might and speed,

The shaper rid of a shape, and thence

(Growth of an outgrown excellence),

Mounted with infinite might and speed,

Freed like a soul to the heaven it dreamed;Over life that was, and death that seemedA victory and a revenge indeed!

Freed like a soul to the heaven it dreamed;

Over life that was, and death that seemed

A victory and a revenge indeed!

As the serpent moves to the open spring,The while a mock, a delusive thingSole in sight of the crowd may be,

As the serpent moves to the open spring,

The while a mock, a delusive thing

Sole in sight of the crowd may be,

So ye, my martyrs, arise, advance!For what is left at the feet of FranceIt is our failure, it is not we.

So ye, my martyrs, arise, advance!

For what is left at the feet of France

It is our failure, it is not we.

II

Not to ourselves our strength we brought:Inexpiable the Hand that wroughtIn us the ruin of no redress,

Not to ourselves our strength we brought:

Inexpiable the Hand that wrought

In us the ruin of no redress,

The storm, the effort, the pang, the fire,The premonition, the vast desire,The primal passion of righteousness!

The storm, the effort, the pang, the fire,

The premonition, the vast desire,

The primal passion of righteousness!

Scarce by the pitiful thwarted plan,The haste, or the studious fears of manDrawing a discord from best delight,

Scarce by the pitiful thwarted plan,

The haste, or the studious fears of man

Drawing a discord from best delight,

The measure is meted of God most wise;Nor the future, with her adjusted eyes,Shall speak us false in our dying fight.

The measure is meted of God most wise;

Nor the future, with her adjusted eyes,

Shall speak us false in our dying fight.

But e’en to me now some use is clearIn the builded truth down-beaten hereFor any along the way to spurn,

But e’en to me now some use is clear

In the builded truth down-beaten here

For any along the way to spurn,

Since ever our broken task may standDisaster’s college in one saved land,Whence many a stripling state shall learn.

Since ever our broken task may stand

Disaster’s college in one saved land,

Whence many a stripling state shall learn.

Out of the human shoots the divine:Be the Republic our only sign,For whose life’s glory our lives have been

Out of the human shoots the divine:

Be the Republic our only sign,

For whose life’s glory our lives have been

Ambassadors on a noble wayTempest-driven, and sent astrayThe first and the final good between.

Ambassadors on a noble way

Tempest-driven, and sent astray

The first and the final good between.

Close to the vision undestroyed,The hope not compassed and yet not void,We perish so; but the world shall mark

Close to the vision undestroyed,

The hope not compassed and yet not void,

We perish so; but the world shall mark

On the hilltop of our work we died,With joy of the groom before the bride,With a dawn-cry thro’ the battle’s dark.

On the hilltop of our work we died,

With joy of the groom before the bride,

With a dawn-cry thro’ the battle’s dark.

III

O last save me on the scaffold’s round!Take heart, that after a thirst profoundThe cup of delicious death is near,

O last save me on the scaffold’s round!

Take heart, that after a thirst profound

The cup of delicious death is near,

And whoso hold it, or whence it flow,O drink it to France, to France! and knowFor the gift thou givest, thou hast her tear.

And whoso hold it, or whence it flow,

O drink it to France, to France! and know

For the gift thou givest, thou hast her tear.

True seed thou wert of the sunnier hour,Honorable, and burst to flowerLate in a hell-pit poison-walled:

True seed thou wert of the sunnier hour,

Honorable, and burst to flower

Late in a hell-pit poison-walled:

Farewell, mortality lopped and pale,Thou body that wast my friend! and Hail,Dear spirit already!... My name is called.

Farewell, mortality lopped and pale,

Thou body that wast my friend! and Hail,

Dear spirit already!... My name is called.


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