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The Fettered Vultures.

Topics: classic

(Battleships of the Coronation Naval Review, Spithead, England, June 24, 1911.)     Hail, sceptered Mars, great god of wars!         Hail, Carnage, queen of blood!     And hail those muffled armaments--         Thy fettered vulture brood!     Their sable wings are laureled and         Their necks are ribboned gay,     And silken folds their talons hide         This kingly holiday.     Grotesque and grim, in chains of gold,         They go with solemn mien,     Their horrid plumes bedizened for         The eyes of king and queen;     But padded claw and mummer's crest         Have served not to disguise     Those iron beaks that thirst for blood,         Those wakeful, wolfish eyes.     Ten condors with unsated maws,         Four lesser birds of prey,     An eagle with undaunted eye         From Shasta, far away;     A score of birds from many seas,         All purged of grime and blood,     Keep truckling pace the fete to grace,--         Mars' fettered vulture brood.     But see ye not, great god of wars,         And ye, Britannia's king,     The day when these black birds shall fly         On fierce unshackled wing?     When they shall meet 'twixt sea and sky,         Rend flesh and break the bone,     And blood shall trickle through the waves         To gray old Triton's throne?     Hail, sceptered Mars, great god of wars!         Hail, Carnage, queen of blood!     And hail those muffled armaments,--         Thy fettered vulture brood!     And yet Christ's gentle teaching scrolls         Prophetic on the sky:     "Behold! some day thy vulture brood         Shall go unfed and die!"

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"(Battleships of the Coronation Naval Review, Spithead, England, June 24, 1911.)..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Charles Hamilton Musgrove delivers a powerful performance in "The Fettered Vultures."... ### 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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"I.     Wind of the North, I know your song       ..."

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