Destruction marks thee! oâer the blood-stainâd heath
Is faintly borne the stifled wail of death;
Millions to fight compellâd, to fight or die
In mangled heaps on War's red altar lie.
The sternly wise, the mildly good, have sped
To the unfruitful mansions of the dead.
Whilst fell Ambition oâer the wasted plain
Triumphant guides his carâthe ensanguinâd rein
Glory directs; fierce brooding oâer the scene,
With hatred glance, with dire unbending mien,
Fell Despotism sits by the red glare
Of Discordâs torch, kindling the flames of war.
For thee then does the Muse her sweetest lay
Pour âmid the shrieks of war, âmid dire dismay;
For thee does Fameâs obstrepârous clarion rise,
Does Praiseâs voice raise meanness to the skies.
Are we then sunk so deep in darkest gloom,
That selfish pride can virtueâs garb assume?
Does real greatness in false splendour live?
When narrow views the futile mind deceive,
When thirst of wealth, or frantic rage for fame,
Lights for awhile self-interestâs little flame,
When legal murders swell the lists of pride;
When gloryâs views the titled idiot guide,
Then will oppressionâs iron influence show
The great manâs comfort as the poor manâs woe.
Isât not enough that splendourâs useless glare,
Real grandeurâs bane, must mock the poor manâs stare;
Isât not enough that luxuryâs varied power
Must cheat the rich paraderâs irksome hour,
While what they want not, what they yet retain,
Adds tenfold grief, more anguished throbs of pain
To each unnumbered, unrecorded woe,
Which bids the bitterest tear of want to ïŹow;
But that the comfort, which despotic sway
Has yet allowed, stern War must tear away.
Ye cold advisers of yet colder kings,
To whose fell breast no passion virtue brings,
Who scheme, regardless of the poor manâs pang,
Who coolly sharpen miseryâs sharpest fang,
Yourselves secure. Yourâs is the power to breathe
Oâer all the world the infectious blast of death,
To snatch at fame, to reap red murderâs spoil,
Receive the injured with a courtierâs smile,
Make a tired nation bless the oppressorâs name,
And for injustice snatch the meed of fame.
Were fetters made for anguish, for despair?
Must starving wretches torment, misery bear?
Who, mad with grief, have snatched from grandeurâs store,
What grandeurâs hand had snatched from them before.
Yet shall the vices of the great pass on,
Vices as glaring as the noon-day sun,
Shall rank corruption pass unheeded by,
Shall ïŹatteryâs voice ascend the wearied sky;
And shall no patriot tear the veil away
Which hides these vices from the face of day?
Is public virtue dead?âis courage gone?
Bows its fair form at fell oppressionâs throne?
Yes! itâs torn awayâthe crimes appear,
Expiring Freedom asks a parting tear,
A powerful hand unrolls the guilt-stainâd veil,
A powerful voice ïŹoats on the tainted gale,
Rising corruptionâs error from beneath,
A shape of glory checks the course of death;
It spreads its shield oâer freedomâs prostrate form,
Its glance disperses envyâs gathering storm;
No trophied bust need tell thy sainted name,
No herald blazon to the world thy fame,
Nor scrolls essay an endless meed to give;
In grateful memory still thy deeds must live.
No sculptured marble shall be raised to thee,
The hearts of England will thy memoirs be.
To thee the Muse attunes no venal lyre,
No thirsts of gold the vocal lays inspire;
No interests plead, no ïŹery passions swell;
Whilst to thy praise she wakes her feeble shell,
She need not speak it, for the pen of fame
On every heart has written BURDETTâS name;
For thou art he, who dared in tumultâs hour,
Dauntless thy tide of eloquence to pour;
Who, fearless, stemmed stern Despotismâs source,
Who traced Oppression to its foulest course;
Who bade Ambition tremble on its throneâ
How could I virtue name, how yet pass on
Thy name!âthough fruitless thy divine essay,
Though vain thy war against fell powerâs array,
Thou taintless emanation from the sky!
Thou purest spark of ïŹres which never die!
Yet let me pause, yet turn aside to weep
Where virtue, genius, wit, with Franklin sleep;
To bend in mute affliction oâer the grave
Where lies the great, the virtuous, and the brave;
Still let us hope in Heaven (for Heaven there is)
That sainted spirit tastes ethereal bliss,
That sainted spirit the reward receives,
Which endless goodness to its votary gives.
Thine be the meed to purest virtue dueâ
Alas! the prospect closes to the view.
Visions of horror croud upon my sight,
They shed around their forms substantial night.
Oppressorsâ venal minions! hence, avaunt!
Think not the soul of Patriotism to daunt;
Though hot with gore from Indiaâs wasted plains,
Some Chief, in triumph, guides the tightened reins;
Though disembodied from this mortal coil,
Pitt lends to each smooth rogue a courtierâs smile;
Yet does not that severer frown withhold,
Which, though impervious to the power of gold,
Could daunt the injured wretch, could turn the poor
Unheard, unnoticed, from the statesmanâs door
This is the spirit which can reckless tell
The fatal trump of useless war to swell;
Can bid Fameâs loudest voice awake his praise,
Can boldly snatch the honorary bays.
Gifts to reward a ruthless, murderous deed,
A crime for which some poorer rogue must bleed.
Is this then justice?âstretch thy powerful arm,
Patriot, dissolve the frigorific charm,
Awake thy loudest thunder, dash the brand
Of stern Oppression from the Tyrantâs hand;
Let reason mount the Despotâs mouldering throne,
And bid an injured nation cease to moan.
Why then, since justice petty crimes can thrall,
Should not its power extend to each, to all?
If he who murders one to death is due,
Should not the great destroyer perish too?
The wretch beneath whose inïŹuence millions bleed?
And yet encomium is the villainâs meed.
His crime the smooth-tongued flatterers conquest name,
Loud in his praises swell the notes of Fame.
Oblivion marks the murdering poor manâs tomb,
Brood oâer his memory contempt and gloom;
His crimes are blazoned in deformed array,
His virtues sink, they fade for aye away.
Snatch then the sword from nerveless virtueâs hand,
Boldly grasp native jurisdictionâs brand;
For justice, poisoned at its source, must yield
The power to each its shivered sword to wield,
To dash oppression from the throne of vice,
To nip the buds of slavery as they rise.
Does jurisprudence slighter crimes restrain,
And seek their vices to controul in vain?
Kings are but men, if thirst of meanest sway
Has not that title even snatched away.â
The fainting Indian, on his native plains,
Writhes to superior powerâs unnumbered pains;
The Asian, in the blushing face of day,
His wife, his child, sees sternly torn away;
Yet dares not to revenge, while warâs dread roar
Floats, in long echoing, on the blood-stainâd shore.
In Europe too wild ruin rushes fast:
See! like a meteor on the midnight blast,
Or evil spirit brooding over gore,
Napoleon calm can war, can misery pour.
May curses blast thee; and in thee the breed
Which forces, which compels, a world to bleed;
May that destruction, which âtis thine to spread,
Descend with ten-fold fury on thy head.
Oh! may the death, which marks thy fell career,
In thine own heartâs blood bathe the empoisoned spear;
May long remorse protract thy latest groan,
Then shall Oppression tremble on its throne.
Yet this alone were vain; Freedom requires
A torch more bright to light its fading ïŹres;
Man must assert his native rights, must say
We take from Monarchsâ hand the granted sway;
Oppressive law no more shall power retain,
Peace, love, and concord, once shall rule again,
And heal the anguish of a suffering world;
Then, then shall things, which now confusedly hurled,
Seem Chaos, be resolved to orderâs sway,
And errors night be turned to virtueâs day.â