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Robert W Service - Tom PaineRobert W Service - Tom Paine
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An Englishman was Thomas Paine          Who bled for liberty; But while his fight was far from vain          He died in poverty: Though some are of the sober thinking          `Twas due to drinking. Yet this is what appeals to me:          Cobbet, a friend, loved him so well He sailed across the surly sea          To raw and rigid New Rochelle: With none to say: `Take him not from us!`          He raped the grave of Thomas. And in his library he set          These bones so woe-begone; I have no doubt his eyes were wet          To scan that skeleton. That grinning skull from which in season          Emerged the Age of Reason. Then Cobbet in his turn lay dead,          And auctioneering tones Over his chattels rudely said:          `Who wants them bloody bones?` None did, so they were scattered far          And God knows where they are. A friend of Franklin and of Pitt          He lived a stormy span; The flame of liberty he lit          And rang the Rights of Man. Yet pilgrims from Vermont and Maine In hero worship seek in vain          The bones of Thomas Paine.
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