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“Take thy sword, Christian! at thy foot it lies—
And let the heathen, as thou callest them, mark
And laud thy skill in combat! take thy sword!”
A demon smile convulsed the Prætor's lip,
Yet Pansa, in the deep unshaken voice
Of Truth's immortal sanctity replied.
“The Martyr needs no weapon: his defence,
Shield, sabre, helm, spear, banner, all are one.
A breath from the Eternal—a quick ray
From the immortality of God—he lives
But in His mercy, dies but when He wills.
—Thou mightiest monarch of the forest beasts!
Who, from the heights of Atlas, on the brow
Of perpendicular precipice, alone,
Planting thine armed foot, hast looked o'er sea
And waste, fearing no equal; or among
The haunted wrecks of Carthage, in the pangs
Of hunger ravining, hast found no food
Where a great nation died that Rome might reign.
Thou fiercest terror of the wilderness!
Who, without contest, dost consume thy foe,
And walkst the earth a conqueror and a king!
Upon thee—though the extreme of famine gnaws
Thy vitals now—and thy flesh burns with stripes

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Given to madden thee, and round and round
With Titan limbs thou leapst in bitter joy
Of human banquet, watching with fierce eyes,
Terrible as is the simoom of thy clime,
The moment of thy certain victory—
Upon thee now I fix the eye, whose light
Was born of God's Eternity, and while
Destruction from the face of Deity
Lours o'er creation, I do bid thee kneel
There in the gory dust! ay, by the Power
Of Him who made thee, monster! I command.”