The Complete Poetical Works of Robert Buchanan In Two Volumes. With a Portrait |
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The Complete Poetical Works of Robert Buchanan | ||
TOM DUNSTAN; OR, THE POLITICIAN.
‘How long, O Lord, how long?’
I
Now poor Tom Dunstan's cold,Our shop is duller;
Scarce a tale is told,
And our talk has lost its old
Red-republican colour!
Though he was sickly and thin,
'Twas a sight to see his face,—
While, sick of the country's sin,
With bang of the fist, and chin
Thrust out, he argued the case!
He prophesied men should be free!
And the money-bags be bled!
‘She's coming, she's coming!’ said he;
‘Courage, boys! wait and see!
Freedom's ahead!’
II
All day we sat in the heat,Like spiders spinning,
Stitching full fine and fleet,
While old Moses on his seat
Sat greasily grinning;
And here Tom said his say,
And prophesied Tyranny's death;
And the tallow burned all day,
And we stitch'd and stitch'd away
In the thick smoke of our breath.
Weary, weary were we,
Our hearts as heavy as lead;
But ‘Patience! she's coming!’ said he;
‘Courage, boys! wait and see!
Freedom's ahead!’
III
And at night, when we took hereThe rest allowed to us,
The Paper came, with the beer,
And Tom read, sharp and clear,
The news out loud to us;
And then, in his witty way,
He threw the jests about:
The cutting things he'd say
Of the wealthy and the gay!
How he turn'd 'em inside out!
And it made our breath more free
To hearken to what he said—
‘She's coming! she's coming!’ said he;
‘Courage, boys! wait and see!
Freedom's ahead!’
IV
But grim Jack Hart, with a sneer,Would mutter, ‘Master!
If Freedom means to appear,
I think she might step here
A little faster!’
Then, 'twas fine to see Tom flame,
And argue, and prove, and preach,
Till Jack was silent for shame,—
Or a fit of coughing came
O' sudden, to spoil Tom's speech.
Ah! Tom had the eyes to see
When Tyranny should be sped:
‘She's coming! she's coming!’ said he
‘Courage, boys! wait and see!
Freedom's ahead!’
V
But Tom was little and weak,The hard hours shook him;
Hollower grew his cheek,
And when he began to speak
The coughing took him.
Ere long the cheery sound
Of his chat among us ceased,
175
That he might not starve, at least.
His pain was sorry to see,
Yet there, on his poor sick-bed,
‘She's coming, in spite of me!
Courage, and wait!’ cried he;
‘Freedom's ahead!’
VI
A little before he died,To see his passion!
‘Bring me a Paper!’ he cried,
And then to study it tried,
In his old sharp fashion;
And with eyeballs glittering,
His look on me he bent,
And said that savage thing
Of the Lords o' the Parliament.
Then, dying, smiling on me,
‘What matter if one be dead?
She's coming at last!’ said he;
‘Courage, boy! wait and see;
Freedom's ahead!’
VII
Ay, now Tom Dunstan's cold,The shop feels duller;
Scarce a tale is told,
And our talk has lost the old
Red-republican colour.
But we see a figure gray,
And we hear a voice of death,
And the tallow burns all day,
And we stitch and stitch away
In the thick smoke of our breath;
Ay, while in the dark sit we,
Tom seems to call from the dead—
‘She's coming! she's coming!’ says he;
‘Courage, boys! wait and see!
Freedom's ahead!’
How long, O Lord! how long
Must thy Handmaid linger—
She who shall right the wrong,
Make the poor sufferer strong?
Sweet morrow, bring her!
Hasten her over the sea,
O Lord! ere Hope be fled!
Bring her to men and to me! . . .
O Slave, pray still on thy knee,
‘Freedom 's ahead!’
Must thy Handmaid linger—
She who shall right the wrong,
Make the poor sufferer strong?
Sweet morrow, bring her!
Hasten her over the sea,
O Lord! ere Hope be fled!
Bring her to men and to me! . . .
O Slave, pray still on thy knee,
‘Freedom 's ahead!’
The Complete Poetical Works of Robert Buchanan | ||