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[LII. To-day I faced my enemies]
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114

[LII. To-day I faced my enemies]

To-day I faced my enemies;
In smooth-tongued converse, veiling hate,
We talked with hypocritic ease,
And brought our business in debate.
And all the time, the knave, who stung
The heart that warmed him, snake-like stirred;
And all the time, their leader's tongue
Slaughtered the English word by word.
And round about me winked and leered
The common herd; and, one and all,
Piled lie on lie until I feared
The Lord, perforce, might hear them bawl.—
Until, in wonder and alarm,
I gazed on traitor, rogue and clown,
Expecting God's avenging arm,
Each moment, would come flashing down;

115

And they, who bartered in the street
His priceless truth for treacherous gold,
Would fall death-stricken at my feet,
As Ananias fell of old.
One fool, lob-sided and bare-browed,
Mindless of home, in spiteful glee,
Of gibbeting my name talked loud,
As though he shared the hangman's fee.
One blustered, swaggered, stamped, and swore,
Till conscience was by rage beguiled;
And one, whose hair was silvered o'er,
Babbled, unnoticed, like a child.
But all the while the subtler cur,
Whose bark had harried on the pack,
Was out of sight: such things prefer
To stab one's honor in the back.
So each, according to his kind,
Wriggled, and licked his cloven tongue,
And lied, as fancy led his mind,
And round about his venom flung;

116

And I, amidst this reptile throng,—
Giants in fraud, but dwarfs in wit,—
Stood calmly, and composed a song,
Like Ragner in the serpents' pit.