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Victor Hugo

Oh, to-morrow! who may dare
  Its realities to scan? 
God to-morrow brings to bear
  What to-day is sown by man. 
’Tis the lightning in its shroud,
’Tis the star-concealing cloud,
Traitor, ’tis his purpose showing,
Engine, lofty tow’rs o’erthrowing,
Wand’ring star, its region changing,
“Lady of kingdoms,” ever ranging. 
  To-morrow!  ’Tis the rude display
Of the throne’s framework, blank and cold,
That, rich with velvet, bright with gold,
  Dazzles the eye to-day.

To-morrow! ’tis the foaming war-horse falling;
To-morrow! thy victorious march appalling,
  ’Tis the red fires from Moscow’s tow’rs that wave;
’Tis thine Old Guard strewing the Belgian plain;
‘Tis the lone island in th’ Atlantic main: 
  To-morrow! ’tis the grave!

Into capitals subdued
  Thou mayst ride with gallant rein,
Cut the knots of civil feud
  With the trenchant steel in twain;
With thine edicts barricade
Haughty Thames’ o’er-freighted trade;
Fickle Victory’s self enthrall,
Captive to thy trumpet call;
Burst the stoutest gates asunder;
Leave the names of brightest wonder,
  Pale and dim, behind thee far;
And to exhaustless armies yield
Thy glancing spur,—­o’er Europe’s field
  A glory-guiding star.

God guards duration, if lends space to thee,
Thou mayst o’er-range mundane immensity,
  Rise high as human head can rise sublime,
Snatch Europe from the stamp of Charlemagne,
Asia from Mahomet; but never gain
  Power o’er the Morrow from the Lord of Time!

Fraser’s Magazine.

THE EAGLET MOURNED.

("Encore si ce banni n’eut rien aime sur terre.")

[V, iv., August, 1832.]

Too hard Napoleon’s fate! if, lone,
No being he had loved, no single one,
    Less dark that doom had been. 
But with the heart of might doth ever dwell
The heart of love! and in his island cell
    Two things there were—­I ween.

Two things—­a portrait and a map there were—­
Here hung the pictured world, an infant there: 
That framed his genius, this enshrined his love. 
And as at eve he glanced round th’ alcove,
Where jailers watched his very thoughts to spy,
What mused he then—­what dream of years gone by
Stirred ’neath that discrowned brow, and fired that glistening eye?

’Twas not the steps of that heroic tale
That from Arcola marched to Montmirail
    On Glory’s red degrees;
Nor Cairo-pashas’ steel-devouring steeds,
Nor the tall shadows of the Pyramids—­
    Ah!  Twas not always these;

’Twas not the bursting shell, the iron sleet,
The whirlwind rush of battle ’neath his feet,
    Through twice ten years ago,
When at his beck, upon that sea of steel
Were launched the rustling banners—­there to reel
    Like masts when tempests blow.

Copyrights
Poems from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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