Early Poems (1859-70). Extempore Lines
Suggested by one of John Bright's speeches on Electoral Reform. A morning crowns the Western hill, A day begins to reign, A sun awakes o'er distant seas— Shall never sleep again. The world is growing old, And men are waxing wise; A mist has cleared—a something falls Like scales from off their eyes. Too long the "Dark of Ignorance" Has brooded on their way; Too long Oppression 's stood before, Excluding light of day. But now they've found the track And now they've seen the dawn, A "beacon lamp" is pointing on, Where stronger glows the morn. Since Adam lived, the mighty ones Have ever ruled the weak; Since Noah's flood, the fettered slave Has seldom dared to speak. 'Tis time a voice was heard, 'Tis time a voice was spoken So in the chain of tyranny A link or two be broken. A tiny rill will swell a stream, A spark will cause a flame, And one man's burning eloquence Has help'd to do the same. And he will persevere, And soon that blaze must spread, Till to the corners of the earth Reflecting beams are shed. The "few" will try to beat it down, But can they stop the flood— Bind up the pinions of the light, Or check the will of God? And is it not His will That deeply injured Right Should overthrow the iron rule And reign instead of Might?
Henry Kendall’s other poems: