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Address To The Flag

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Float in the winds of heaven, O tattered Flag!     Emblem of hope to all the misruled world:     Thy field of golden stars is rent and red     Dyed in the blood of brothers madly spilled     By brother-hands upon the mother-soil.     O fatal Upas of the savage Nile,[CT]     Transplanted hither rooted multiplied     Watered with bitter tears and sending forth     Thy venom-vapors till the land is mad,     Thy day is done. A million blades are swung     To lay thy jungles open to the sun;     A million torches fire thy blasted boles;     A million hands shall drag thy fibers out     And feed the fires till every root and branch     Lie in dead ashes. From the blackened soil,     Enriched and moistened with fraternal blood,     Beside the palm shall spring the olive-tree,     And every breeze shall waft the happy song     Of Freedom crowned with olive-twigs and flowers.     Yea, Patriot-Flag of our old patriot-sires,     Honored victorious on an hundred fields     Where side by side for Freedom's mother-land     Her Southern sons and Northern fighting fell,     And side by side in glorious graves repose,     I see the dawn of glory grander still,     When hand in hand upon this battle-field     The blue-eyed maidens of the Merrimac     With dewy roses from the Granite Hills,     And dark-eyed daughters from the land of palms     With orange-blossoms from the broad St. Johns,     In solemn concert singing as they go,     Shall strew the graves of these fraternal dead.     The day of triumph comes, O blood-stained Flag!     Washed clean and lustrous in the morning light     Of a new era, thou shalt float again     In more than pristine glory o'er the land     Peace-blest and re-united. On the seas     Thou shalt be honored to the farthest isle.     The oppressed of foreign lands shall flock the shores     To look upon and bless thee. Mothers shall lift     Their infants to behold thee as a star     New-born in heaven to light the darksome world.     The children weeping round the desolate,     Sore-stricken mother in the saddened home     Whereto the father shall no more return,     In future years will proudly boast the blood     Of him who bravely fell defending thee.     And these misguided brothers who would tear     Thy starry field asunder and would trail     Their own proud flag and history in the dust,     Ere many years will bless thee, dear old Flag,     That thou didst triumph even over them.     Aye, even they with proudly swelling hearts     Will see the glory thou shalt shortly wear,     And new-born stars swing in upon thy field     In lustrous clusters. Come, O glorious day     Of Freedom crowned with Peace. God's will be done!     God's will is peace on earth good-will to men.     The chains all broken and the bond all free,     O may this nation learn to war no more;     Yea, into plow-shares may these brothers beat     Their swords and into pruning-hooks their spears,     Clasp hands again, and plant these battle-fields     With golden corn and purple-clustered vines,     And side by side re-build the broken walls     Joined and cemented as one solid stone     With patriot-love and Christ's sweet charity.

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"Float in the winds of heaven, O tattered Flag!..."

"Address To The Flag" is a quintessential example of Hanford Lennox Gordon's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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