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Victor Hugo - SunriseVictor Hugo - Sunrise
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Foul times there are when nations spiritless   Throw honour away For tinsel glory, to base happiness   A mournful prey. Then from the nations, fain of lustful rest,   Dull slavery`s dreams, All virtue ebbs, as from a sponge tight-prest   Clear water streams. Then men, to vice and folly docile slaves,   Aye lowly inclined, Ape the vile, fearful reed that stoops and waves   For every wind. Then feasts and kisses; naught that saith the soul   Stirs shame or dread; One drinks, one eats, one sings, one skips,—is foul   And comforted. Crime, ministered to by loathsome lackeys, reigns;   Yea, `neath God`s fires Laughs; and ye shiver, sombre dread remains   Of glorious sires. All life seems foul, with vice intoxicate,   Aye, thus to be.— Sudden a clarion unto all winds elate   Peals liberty! And the dull world whose soul this blast doth smite,   Is like to one Drunken all night, up-staggering `neath the light   O` the risen sun!
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