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Alfred Noyes - DrakeAlfred Noyes - Drake
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            I       England, my mother,         Lift to my western sweetheart     One full cup of English mead, breathing of the may!       Pledge the may-flower in her face that you and ah, none other,         Sent her from the mother-land           Across the dashing spray.             II       Hers and yours the story:         Think of it, oh, think of it--     That immortal dream when El Dorado flushed the skies!       Fill the beaker full and drink to Drake`s undying glory,         Yours and hers (Oh, drink of it!)           The dream that never dies.             III       Yours and hers the free-men         Who scanned the stars and westward sung     When a king commanded and the Atlantic thundered "Nay!"       Hers as yours the pride is, for Drake our first of seamen         First upon his bow-sprit hung           That bunch of English may.             IV       Pledge her deep, my mother;         Through her veins thy life-stream runs!     Spare a thought, too, sweetheart, for my mother o`er the sea!       Younger eyes are yours; but ah, those old eyes and none other         Once bedewed the may-flower; once,           As yours, were clear and free.             V       Once! Nay, now as ever         Beats within her ancient heart     All the faith that took you forth to seek your heaven alone:       Shadows come and go; but let no shade of doubt dissever,         Cloak, or cloud, or keep apart           Two souls whose prayer is one.             VI       Sweetheart, ah, be tender--         Tender with her prayer to-night!     Such a goal might yet be ours!--the battle-flags be furled,       All the wars of earth be crushed, if only now your slender         Hand should grasp her gnarled old hand           And federate the world.             VII       Foolish it may seem, sweet!         Still the battle thunder lours:     Darker look the Dreadnoughts as old Europe goes her way!       Yet your hand, your hand, has power to crush that evil dream, sweet;         You, with younger eyes than ours           And brows of English may.             VIII       If a singer cherishes         Idle dreams or idle words,     You shall judge--and you`ll forgive: for, far away or nigh,       Still abides that Vision without which a people perishes:         Love will strike the atoning chords!           Hark--there comes a cry!             IX       Over all this earth, sweet,         The poor and weak look up to you--     Lift their burdened shoulders, stretch their fettered hands in prayer:       You, with gentle hands, can bring the world-wide dream to birth, sweet,         While I lift this cup to you           And wonder--will she care?             X       Kindle, eyes, and beat, heart!         Hold the brimming breaker up!     All the may is burgeoning from East to golden West!       England, my mother, greet America, my sweetheart:         —Ah, but ere I drained the cup           I found her on your breast.
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