MASSEY
Our second Richard Lion-HeartIn days of great Queen Bess,He did this deed, he played this part,With true old nobleness,And wrath heroic that was nursedTo bear the fiercest battle-burst,When maddened foes should wreak their worst.Signalled the English Admiral,‘Weigh or cut anchors.’ ForA Spanish fleet bore down, in allThe majesty of war,Athwart our tack for many a mile,As there we lay off Florez Isle,With crews half sick, all tired of toil.Eleven of our twelve ships escaped;Sir Richard stood alone!Though they were three-and-fifty sail—A hundred men to one—The old Sea-Rover would not run,So long as he had man or gun;But he could die when all was done.‘The Devil’s broken loose, my lads,In shape of popish Spain:And we must sink him in the sea,Or hound him home again.Now, you old sea-dogs, show your paws!Have at them tooth and nail and claws!’And then his long, bright blade he draws.The deck was cleared, the boatswain blew;The grim sea-lions stand;The death-fires lit in every eye,The burning match in hand.With mail of glorious intentAll hearts were clad; and in they went,A force that cut through where ’twas sent.‘Push home, my hardy pikemen,For we play a desperate part;To-day, my gunners, let them feelThe pulse of England’s heart!They shall remember long that weOnce lived; and think how shamefullyWe shook them—One to fifty-three!’With face of one who cheerily goesTo meet his doom that day,Sir Richard sprang upon his foes;The foremost gave him way;His round shot smashed them through and through,At every flash white splinters flew,And madder grew his fighting few.They clasp the little shipRevenge,As in the arms of fire;They run aboard her, six at once;Hearts beat, hot guns leap higher;—Through bloody gaps the boarders swarm,But still our English stay the storm,The bulwark in their breast is firm.Ship after ship, like broken wavesThat wash upon a rock,Those mighty galleons fall back foiled,And shattered from the shock.With fire she answers all their blows;Again—again in pieces strowsThe girdle round her as they close.Through all that night the great white stormOf worlds in silence rolled;Sirius with green-azure sparkle,Mars in ruddy gold.Heaven looked with stillness terribleDown on a fight most fierce and fell—A sea transfigured into hell!Some know not they are wounded till’Tis slippery where they stand;Then each one tighter grips his steel,As ’twere salvation’s hand.Grim faces glow through lurid nightWith sweat of spirit shining bright:Only the dead on deck turn white.At day-break the flame picture fadesIn blackness and in blood;There, after fifteen hours of fight,The unconquered Sea-King stoodDefying all the power of Spain:Fifteen armadas hurled in vain,And fifteen hundred foemen slain!About that little barkRevenge,The baffled Spaniards rideAt distance. Two of their good shipsWere sunken at her side;The rest lie round her in a ring,As, round the dying forest-kingThe dogs afraid of his death-spring.Our pikes all broken, powder spent,Sails, masts to shivers blown;And with her dead and wounded crewThe ship was settling down.Sir Richard’s wounds were hot and deep,Then cried he, with a proud, pale lip,‘Ho, Master Gunner, sink the ship!’‘Make ready now, my mariners,To go aloft with me,That nothing to the SpaniardMay remain of victory.They cannot take us, nor we yield;So let us leave our battle-field,Under the shelter of God’s shield.’They had not heart to dare fulfilThe stern commander’s word:With swelling hearts and welling eyes,They carried him aboardThe Spaniards’ ship; and round him standThe warriors of his wasted band:Then said he, feeling death at hand,‘Here die I, Richard Grenville,With a joyful and quiet mind;I reach a soldier’s end, I leaveA soldier’s fame behind.Who for his Queen and country fought,For Honour and Religion wrought,And died as a true soldier ought.’Earth never returned a worthier trustFor hand of Heaven to take,Since Arthur’s sword, Excalibur,Was cast into the lake,And the King’s grievous wounds were dressed,And healed, by weeping Queens, who blessed,And bore him to a valley of rest.Old heroes who could grandly do,As they could greatly dare,A vesture very gloriousTheir shining spirits wearOf noble deeds! God give us grace,That we may see such face to face,In our great day that comes apace!Gerald Massey.
Our second Richard Lion-HeartIn days of great Queen Bess,He did this deed, he played this part,With true old nobleness,And wrath heroic that was nursedTo bear the fiercest battle-burst,When maddened foes should wreak their worst.Signalled the English Admiral,‘Weigh or cut anchors.’ ForA Spanish fleet bore down, in allThe majesty of war,Athwart our tack for many a mile,As there we lay off Florez Isle,With crews half sick, all tired of toil.Eleven of our twelve ships escaped;Sir Richard stood alone!Though they were three-and-fifty sail—A hundred men to one—The old Sea-Rover would not run,So long as he had man or gun;But he could die when all was done.‘The Devil’s broken loose, my lads,In shape of popish Spain:And we must sink him in the sea,Or hound him home again.Now, you old sea-dogs, show your paws!Have at them tooth and nail and claws!’And then his long, bright blade he draws.The deck was cleared, the boatswain blew;The grim sea-lions stand;The death-fires lit in every eye,The burning match in hand.With mail of glorious intentAll hearts were clad; and in they went,A force that cut through where ’twas sent.‘Push home, my hardy pikemen,For we play a desperate part;To-day, my gunners, let them feelThe pulse of England’s heart!They shall remember long that weOnce lived; and think how shamefullyWe shook them—One to fifty-three!’With face of one who cheerily goesTo meet his doom that day,Sir Richard sprang upon his foes;The foremost gave him way;His round shot smashed them through and through,At every flash white splinters flew,And madder grew his fighting few.They clasp the little shipRevenge,As in the arms of fire;They run aboard her, six at once;Hearts beat, hot guns leap higher;—Through bloody gaps the boarders swarm,But still our English stay the storm,The bulwark in their breast is firm.Ship after ship, like broken wavesThat wash upon a rock,Those mighty galleons fall back foiled,And shattered from the shock.With fire she answers all their blows;Again—again in pieces strowsThe girdle round her as they close.Through all that night the great white stormOf worlds in silence rolled;Sirius with green-azure sparkle,Mars in ruddy gold.Heaven looked with stillness terribleDown on a fight most fierce and fell—A sea transfigured into hell!Some know not they are wounded till’Tis slippery where they stand;Then each one tighter grips his steel,As ’twere salvation’s hand.Grim faces glow through lurid nightWith sweat of spirit shining bright:Only the dead on deck turn white.At day-break the flame picture fadesIn blackness and in blood;There, after fifteen hours of fight,The unconquered Sea-King stoodDefying all the power of Spain:Fifteen armadas hurled in vain,And fifteen hundred foemen slain!About that little barkRevenge,The baffled Spaniards rideAt distance. Two of their good shipsWere sunken at her side;The rest lie round her in a ring,As, round the dying forest-kingThe dogs afraid of his death-spring.Our pikes all broken, powder spent,Sails, masts to shivers blown;And with her dead and wounded crewThe ship was settling down.Sir Richard’s wounds were hot and deep,Then cried he, with a proud, pale lip,‘Ho, Master Gunner, sink the ship!’‘Make ready now, my mariners,To go aloft with me,That nothing to the SpaniardMay remain of victory.They cannot take us, nor we yield;So let us leave our battle-field,Under the shelter of God’s shield.’They had not heart to dare fulfilThe stern commander’s word:With swelling hearts and welling eyes,They carried him aboardThe Spaniards’ ship; and round him standThe warriors of his wasted band:Then said he, feeling death at hand,‘Here die I, Richard Grenville,With a joyful and quiet mind;I reach a soldier’s end, I leaveA soldier’s fame behind.Who for his Queen and country fought,For Honour and Religion wrought,And died as a true soldier ought.’Earth never returned a worthier trustFor hand of Heaven to take,Since Arthur’s sword, Excalibur,Was cast into the lake,And the King’s grievous wounds were dressed,And healed, by weeping Queens, who blessed,And bore him to a valley of rest.Old heroes who could grandly do,As they could greatly dare,A vesture very gloriousTheir shining spirits wearOf noble deeds! God give us grace,That we may see such face to face,In our great day that comes apace!Gerald Massey.
Our second Richard Lion-HeartIn days of great Queen Bess,He did this deed, he played this part,With true old nobleness,And wrath heroic that was nursedTo bear the fiercest battle-burst,When maddened foes should wreak their worst.
Signalled the English Admiral,‘Weigh or cut anchors.’ ForA Spanish fleet bore down, in allThe majesty of war,Athwart our tack for many a mile,As there we lay off Florez Isle,With crews half sick, all tired of toil.
Eleven of our twelve ships escaped;Sir Richard stood alone!Though they were three-and-fifty sail—A hundred men to one—The old Sea-Rover would not run,So long as he had man or gun;But he could die when all was done.
‘The Devil’s broken loose, my lads,In shape of popish Spain:And we must sink him in the sea,Or hound him home again.Now, you old sea-dogs, show your paws!Have at them tooth and nail and claws!’And then his long, bright blade he draws.
The deck was cleared, the boatswain blew;The grim sea-lions stand;The death-fires lit in every eye,The burning match in hand.With mail of glorious intentAll hearts were clad; and in they went,A force that cut through where ’twas sent.
‘Push home, my hardy pikemen,For we play a desperate part;To-day, my gunners, let them feelThe pulse of England’s heart!They shall remember long that weOnce lived; and think how shamefullyWe shook them—One to fifty-three!’
With face of one who cheerily goesTo meet his doom that day,Sir Richard sprang upon his foes;The foremost gave him way;His round shot smashed them through and through,At every flash white splinters flew,And madder grew his fighting few.
They clasp the little shipRevenge,As in the arms of fire;They run aboard her, six at once;Hearts beat, hot guns leap higher;—Through bloody gaps the boarders swarm,But still our English stay the storm,The bulwark in their breast is firm.
Ship after ship, like broken wavesThat wash upon a rock,Those mighty galleons fall back foiled,And shattered from the shock.With fire she answers all their blows;Again—again in pieces strowsThe girdle round her as they close.
Through all that night the great white stormOf worlds in silence rolled;Sirius with green-azure sparkle,Mars in ruddy gold.Heaven looked with stillness terribleDown on a fight most fierce and fell—A sea transfigured into hell!
Some know not they are wounded till’Tis slippery where they stand;Then each one tighter grips his steel,As ’twere salvation’s hand.Grim faces glow through lurid nightWith sweat of spirit shining bright:Only the dead on deck turn white.
At day-break the flame picture fadesIn blackness and in blood;There, after fifteen hours of fight,The unconquered Sea-King stoodDefying all the power of Spain:Fifteen armadas hurled in vain,And fifteen hundred foemen slain!
About that little barkRevenge,The baffled Spaniards rideAt distance. Two of their good shipsWere sunken at her side;The rest lie round her in a ring,As, round the dying forest-kingThe dogs afraid of his death-spring.
Our pikes all broken, powder spent,Sails, masts to shivers blown;And with her dead and wounded crewThe ship was settling down.Sir Richard’s wounds were hot and deep,Then cried he, with a proud, pale lip,‘Ho, Master Gunner, sink the ship!’
‘Make ready now, my mariners,To go aloft with me,That nothing to the SpaniardMay remain of victory.They cannot take us, nor we yield;So let us leave our battle-field,Under the shelter of God’s shield.’
They had not heart to dare fulfilThe stern commander’s word:With swelling hearts and welling eyes,They carried him aboardThe Spaniards’ ship; and round him standThe warriors of his wasted band:Then said he, feeling death at hand,
‘Here die I, Richard Grenville,With a joyful and quiet mind;I reach a soldier’s end, I leaveA soldier’s fame behind.Who for his Queen and country fought,For Honour and Religion wrought,And died as a true soldier ought.’
Earth never returned a worthier trustFor hand of Heaven to take,Since Arthur’s sword, Excalibur,Was cast into the lake,And the King’s grievous wounds were dressed,And healed, by weeping Queens, who blessed,And bore him to a valley of rest.
Old heroes who could grandly do,As they could greatly dare,A vesture very gloriousTheir shining spirits wearOf noble deeds! God give us grace,That we may see such face to face,In our great day that comes apace!
Gerald Massey.