FAREWELL TO WAR. BEING A PROLOGUE TO "Lord Falkland's Dream," and "Arnold de Winkelried, or the Patriot's Pass-word." PEACE to the trumpet! -no more shall my breath Sound an alarm in the dull ear of death, Nor startle to life from the truce of the tomb The relics of heroes, to combat till doom. I will not, as bards have been wont, since the flood, With the river of song swell the river of blood, -The blood of the valiant, that fell in all climes, -The song of the gifted, that hallow'd all crimes, All crimes in the war-fiend incarnate in one; War, withering the earth-war, eclipsing the sun, Despoiling, destroying, since discord began, God's works and God's mercies, - man's labours and man. Yet war have I loved, and of war I have sung, With my heart in my hand and my soul on my tongue; With all the affections that render life dear, With the throbbings of hope and the flutterings of fear, -Of hope, that the sword of the brave might pre vail, -Of fear, lest the arm of the righteous should fail. But what was the war that extorted my praise? What battles were fought in -The war against darkness contending with light; The war against violence trampling down right; The battles of patriots, with banner unfurl'd, To guard a child's cradle against an arm'd world; Of peasants that peopled their ancestors' graves, Lest their ancestors' homes should be peopled by slaves. I served, too, in wars and campaigns of the mind; My pen was the sword, which I drew for mankind; - -In war against tyranny throned in the West, - Campaigns to enfranchise the negro oppress'd; The war against war, on whatever pretence, Yes, war against war was ever my pride; My youth and my manhood in waging it died, And age, with its weakness, its wounds, and its scars, 'T is judgment brought down on themselves by the proud, Like lightning, by fools, from an innocent cloud. I war against all war ;- -nor, till my pulse cease, Will I throw down my weapons, because I love peace, Because I love liberty, execrate strife, And dread, most of all deaths, that slow death called life, Dragg'd on by a vassal, in purple or chains, The breath of whose nostrils, the blood in 'whose veins, He calls not his own, nor holds from his God, While it hangs on a king's or a sycophant's nod. War-clangours, my latest war-chaplets I wreathe, The malice of fiends or the madness of men, Break the peace of our land, and by villanous wrong Find a field for a hero, a hero for song." |