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A SONG OF THE ENGLISH.

Fair is our lot-O goodly is our heritage!

(Humble ye, my people, and be fearful in your

mirth!)

For the Lord our God Most High

He hath made the deep as dry,

He hath smote for us a pathway to the ends of all the Earth!

Yea, though we sinned-and our rulers went from righteousness

Deep in all dishonour though we stained our gar

ments' hem.

Oh be ye not dismayed,

Though we stumbled and we strayed,

We were led by evil counsellors-the Lord shall deal with them.

Hold ye the Faith the Faith our Fathers

sealed us;

Whoring not with visions-overwise and overstale.

Except ye pay the Lord

Single heart and single sword,

Of your children in their bondage shall He ask them treble-tale.

Keep ye the Law-be swift in all obedience.
Clear the land of evil, drive the road and bridge

the ford.

Make ye sure to each his own

That he reap what he hath sown;

By the peace among Our peoples let men know we serve the Lord.

Hear now a song—a song of broken interludesA song of little cunning; of a singer nothing worth.

Through the naked words and mean

May ye see the truth between

As the singer knew and touched it in the ends of

all the Earth!

The Coastwise Lights.

Our brows are wreathed with spindrift and the weed is on our knees;

Our loins are battered 'neath us by the swinging,

smoking seas.

From reef and rock and skerry-over headland, ness and voe

The Coastwise Lights of England watch the ships of England go!

Through the endless summer evenings, on the lineless, level floors;

Through the yelling Channel tempest when the syren hoots and roars—

By day the dipping house-flag and by night the rocket's trail

As the sheep that graze behind us so we know them where they hail.

We bridge across the dark, and bid the helmsman

have

care,

The flash that wheeling inland wakes his sleeping

wife to prayer;

From our vexed eyries, head to gale, we bind in burning chains

The lover from the sea-rim drawn-his love in English lanes.

We greet the clippers wing-and-wing that race the Southern wool;

We warn the crawling cargo-tanks of Bremen, Leith and Hull;

To each and all our equal lamp at peril of the

sea

The white wall-sided warships or the whalers of Dundee!

Come up, come in from Eastward, from the guardports of the Morn!

Beat up, beat in from Southerly, O gipsies of the Horn!

Swift shuttles of an Empire's loom that weave us main to main,

The Coastwise Lights of England give you welcome back again!

Go, get you gone up-Channel with the sea-crust on your plates;

Go, get you into London with the burden of your freights!

Haste, for they talk of Empire there, and say, if

any seek,

The Lights of England sent you and by silence shall ye speak.

The Song of the Mead.

Hear now the Song of the Dead—in the North by the torn berg-edges

They that look still to the Pole, asleep by their hide-stripped sledges.

Song of the Dead in the South-in the sun by their skeleton horses,

Where the warrigal whimpers and bays through the dust of the sere river-courses.

Song of the Dead in the East-in the heat-rotted jungle hollows,

Where the dog-ape barks in the kloof-in the brake of the buffalo-wallows.

Song of the Dead in the West-in the Barrens, the snow that betrayed them,

Where the wolverine tumbles their packs from the camp and the grave-mound they made them; Hear now the Song of the Dead!

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