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Address To Albion.

Topics: classic

To thee, O Albion! be the tribute paid     Which sympathy demands, the patriot tear;     While echo'd forth to thy remotest shade,     Rebellion's menace sounds in every ear.     Though Gallia's vaunts should fill the trembling skies,     'Till nature's undiscover'd regions start     At the rude clamor; yet, shouldst thou despise,     While thy brave subjects own a common heart.     But lo! fresh streaming from the Hibernian[1] height     Her own red torrent wild-eyed faction pours;     While, 'mid her falling ranks, ignobly great,     Loud vengeance raves, and desperation scours.     Denouncing murderous strife, the rebel train     Wave their red ensigns of inhuman hate     O'er every hamlet, every peaceful plain;     Rejecting reason, and despising fate.     Oh! that again our raptur'd eyes could see     Their ripening crops bloom yellow o'er the land;     Their happy shepherds, like their pasture, free     No more a factious race, a ruffian band.     That albion, once again with concord blest,     May still support that great, that glorious name,     Which ardent glows in every patriot's breast,     And crowns her hoary cliffs with matchless fame.     Then, then, might foreign foes, around our shores,     Pour the big tempest of their arms in vain;     Then, might they learn that freedom still is ours,     That Britons still control the subject main.     Oh! all ye kindred pow'rs, awake, arise!     On boundless glory's giant pinions soar;     Let Gallia tremble! while the sounding skies     Proclaim us free 'till time shall be no more!

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"To thee, O Albion! be the tribute paid..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Thomas Gent delivers a powerful performance in "Address To Albion."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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