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The Age

A Colloquial Satire. By Philip James Bailey

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197

THE NEMESIS OF NATIONS.

Deep in earth's caverned heart, I see her now—
The Nemesis of Nations. Stern she sits
Her monumental throne. The hush of death
Spreads round her like a halo. She is girt
With silence, as a girdle. Even Hope
Might deem her dead. Yet lives she; live she will.
She hath a vital secret in her breast,
As though she nursed a god, which scarcely breathes,
The freedom of the future. To all else
Superior in that secret, nought beside
Heeds she; but hears, indifferent, o'er her head
The ebb, or flow, of empire; and the march
Of many a generation; and but smiles,
And rocks her foot, contemptuous. Not for these
Moves she; nor is she moved; nor doth she watch.
Dumb prophetess of woe! she hath not been
Incarcerate; nor abandoned; nor beguiled;
Nor, of the good, suspected; nor, by kings,
Ever forgot;—if, haply, one hath eyed,
Nor, shuddering, shrunk before that stately stare,

198

Her pale and dominant brow, and mounded breast,
Elate with life:—nay, she hath never been
Save by her own serene and sacred will
Exiled from Earth's face. What, then, doth she there,
Darkling, in central solitudes? Alas!
Of her divine prevision all devoid,
Unworthy suitors hath she, many an one,
Who her to forfeiture would tempt, nor own
God's gracious gift, empowering her to abide
The hour of destiny. But when the dew,
Now wet, hath ripened to the thunder-cloud,
And man's breath to God's lightning, one shall come,
And ope her sealéd hand;—take out the spell
And put in it a spear; and sanctify
Her forehead with a crown; and wreathe her loins
With silver serpents; and so lead her forth
To head reviving manhood. Would to Heaven
I, too, might see the awakening of that day,
Day-dawn, or sun-down, speed it, God of right!

199

WAR.

So heathen against heathen, tribe 'gainst tribe,
Streamed onward in embattled waves of war;
Not that so vast, to immemorial age
Sacred, of Scythic birth, which flood-like surged
Far round the mount Armenian; nor so wide
Which once the crutchéd hermit's eyes beheld,
Uprist in bodily answer to his prayers,
By Danube's bank, whence hardy knighthood's shield;—
Nor host immixed that by Propontic wave
Its ranks deployed, by nations, to salute
The golden-footed dame, who sheathed in steel
Her lilied breast, and couched her lance for love
Of Christ; and, with the hope of wresting back
From infidels, His hallowed tomb, led on
With jewelled rein, and morion snowy plumed,
Her maiden chivalry, and glittering queans,
Luckless; for ah! their virgin valour quailed,
Ere yet the manlier might of stern Islam
Bounded upon the spoil; nor, till unhorsed,
Unhelmed, knew these the delicate foe they proved,

200

Flower breath'd, as in the moon of blossoms earth;—
Nor that, by gay Chalons, where fell the force
Moorish beneath the Frankland monarch's mace,
Which Europe saved from turban and Koraun;—
Nor those above whose heads the flaming sword
Two handled, and two edged with pest and fire,
Of militant angel, pierced the clouds and slew,
At one stroke, squadrons. Thus, for many an age,
Prevailed the universal lust of death,
And vulgar slaughter; war, of all bad things
Worst, and man's crowning crime, save when for faith,
Or freedom waged, but when for greed of ground,
And mere dominion, cursed of man and God.
And people against people rose, and wronged
Each one the other; robbed of land or life;
As when the clans Mogul, which late had left
Their maze of mountains the high plains that bound
Whence Buzanghir, and all his valorous brood,
Heads of the golden horde, and sons of light,
Whom Alancova to her sun-spouse bare,
At treble birth, the lords of throne and crown,
Khaliph's, or king's, or Tzar's, which Zinghis gained,
Or filial Kublai, with all suasive sword—
Bright ravisher of souls—into one realm,
Rounded, and died; strict Theists they who held
In God and their own swords, a brief, brave creed,—

201

O'er Europe's quaking heart careered, and like
Sunblast on greensward, graved their fiery name
In blazing towns and harvests blackening; woke,
With tramp terrific of their horses' hoofs,
The slumbering nations; to its stony foot
Burned Breslaw; and at Wollstadt won a field
Red with the gore of Christian chivalry,
But fled from their own conquest, fled aghast,
And perished in the wilds where they were born;—
And when, in later times, and distant lands
By sumless crimes indignant made, distraught,
The Azteks, for their lord and woe-crowned head,
Stern Moctezuma, archer of the heavens—
Beset by bigots, falsely named white gods,
Their deeds of black fiends rather savouring,
But, steel-clad cowards, strong in fulminant arms,
Instalments thought of thunder at command,
By the plume mailed barbarians, gold who held
The sun's bright tearlets—sought in vain to buy
Humanity of Christians, infidel
These to earth's purest creed;—or southwards, where
His quadripartite world the Ynga ruled,
Earth's universal passion wasting not
On king-faced coin, but hallowing every mote
To beauty, or to deity, till came
Crowding, the guests profane, with priest and cross,

202

Who slaughtering thousands of his flock, and him
Incarcerating, bade pile his prison walls
With the soul-soiling dross they hungered for,
Ere he should know release, his sole release
Death. The Invader vaunted him of wrongs,
And gloried in the havoc of his hand.
And victor after victor vexed the world;
With scythéd chariots mowed the fields of blood
Cities of wealth and states despoiled of peace;
Red rapine reaped the land, and famine fed;
While maid and mother, eld and childhood ate
The heart of grief and drank the tears of woe.

203

A FRAGMENT.

And Zetland where, betimes, some ruthless wight
Scaling the scaur, in sport the nests despoils
Of auk or gull; they, crowding clamorous round,
Intruded on, insulted, injured, sore
Besiege his ears, until with querulous wing,
One stern and ancient fowl assails his eyes;
His hold gives way; he topples headlong down,
From crag to crag rebounding, till the sea,
For many a ghastly loan responsible,
Seals up the expiring secret; and, avenged,
God's feathered kind scream triumph; him, at home,
Or dame, or mother, by her drowsy wheel,
Expects; and sharpens, through the ominous night,
Her ears, to catch his customary step
Whose ghost now flaunts the breakers, or, far off,
Lamps the lone wold. Or, where, by Jura's isle,
Fond mermaid, hybrid of the earth and sea,
Than fair haired Yseult vainer of her locks,
Erect amid the waves, on caudal curve
Poises her form, weed-girdled; in her hand

204

Her shadow glassed; she, rivals knowing none,
Beckons the youth belated in his skiff,
Far out of hail of land; seductive, lauds
The quiet cave, surpassing, in sweet gloom,
Earth's superficial glare; her bridal home;
The charm immortal of the foamy sea;
Her dower of pearl and amber; wide domain,
And every joy; oft, over shoulders white
Showering her shining tresses, which, as oft,
The lapping waves displace; but he,—with fear
Half dead, though scarce incurious of the deeps,
Nor to adventure, mostly, disinclined,—
Rows faster, lest the moon set, till he hears
His heart's betrothed, him wailing on the beach.

205

THE PASSING BELL.

Hark! 'tis the passing bell;
While the soul is on its way,
While it waves its upward wings,
We yet may pray.
Pray for the good man's soul;
He is leaving earth for heaven;
And it soothes us to feel that the best
May be forgiven.
Pray for the sinful soul;
It fleëth we know not where;
But wherever it be, let us hope;
For God is there.

206

Pray for the rich man's soul;
Not all be unjust, nor vain;
The wise he consoled; and he saved
The poor from pain.
Pray for the poor man's soul;
The death of this life of ours,
He hath shook from his feet; he is one
Of the Heavenly powers.
Pray for the old man's soul;
He hath laboured long; through life
It was battle, or march; he hath ceased,
Serene, from strife.
Pray for the infant's soul;
With his spirit's crown unsoiled,
He hath won, without war, a realm;
Gained all, nor toiled.
Pray for the struggling soul;
The mists of the straits of death
Clear off; in some star-bright isle
It anchoreth.

207

Pray for the soul assured;
Though it wrought in a gloomy mine,
Yet the gems it earned were its own,
That soul divine.
Pray for the simple soul;
For it loved, and therein was wise,
Though itself knew not; but with Heaven
Confused the skies.
Pray for the sage's soul;
'Neath his welkin wide of mind,
Lay the central thought of God,
Though undefined.
Pray for the high, the mean;
Souls are of equal birth;
Let thoughts be the joy of the world,
And end of earth.
Pray for the souls of all,
To God, and His holy Son,
That, filled with the Spirit Divine,
All may be one.

208

Hush! for the bell hath ceased;
And the spirit's fate is sealed;
To the angels known; to man
Left unrevealed.
THE END.