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Poems. Wilde, Lady, 1826–1896.
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page: 17

FORESHADOWINGS.

    I.

  • OREMUS! Oremus! Look down on us, Father!
  • Like visions of Patmos Thy last judgments gather
  • The angels of doom, in bright, terrible beauty,
  • Rise up from their thrones to fulfil their stern duty.
  • Woe to us, woe! the thunders have spoken,
  • The first of the mystical seals hath been broken.

    II.

  • Through the cleft thunder‐cloud the weird wierd coursers are rushing—
  • Their hoofs will strike deep in the hearts they are crushing;
  • And the crown’d and the proud of the old kingly races
  • Fall down at the vision, like stars from their places:
  • Oremus! Oremus! The pale earth is heark’ning;
  • Already the spirit‐steeds round us are dark’ning.

    III.

  • With crown and with bow, on his white steed immortal,
  • The Angel of Wrath passes first through the portal;
  • But faces grow paler, and hush’d is earth’s laughter,
  • When on his pale steed comes the Plague Spirit after.
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  • Oremus! Oremus! His poison‐breath slayeth;
  • The red will soon fade from each bright lip that prayeth.

    IV.

  • Now, with nostrils dilated and thunder hoofs crashing,
  • On rushes the war‐steed, his lurid eyes flashing;
  • There is blood on the track where his long mane is streaming,
  • There is death where the sword of his rider is gleaming.
  • Woe to the lands where that red steed is flying!
  • There tyrants are warring, and heroes are dying.

    V.

  • Oh! the golden‐hair’d children reck nought but their playing,
  • Thro’ the rich fields of corn with their young mothers straying;
  • And the strong‐hearted men, with their muscles of iron,
  • What reck they of ills that their pathway environ?
  • There’s a tramp like a knell—a cold shadow gloometh—
  • Woe! ’tis the black steed of Famine that cometh

    VI.

  • At the breath of its rider the green earth is blasted,
  • And childhood’s frail form droops down pallid, and wasted;
  • The soft sunny hair falleth dank on the arm
  • Of the mother, whose love shields no longer from harm:
  • For strength is scarce left her to weep o’er the dying,
  • Ere dead by the loved one the mother is lying.

    VII.

  • But can we only weep, when above us thus lour
  • The death‐bearing wings of the angels of power;
  • When around are the arrows of pestilence flying—
  • Around, the pale heaps of the famine‐struck lying
  • —No, brother of sorrow, when life’s light is weakest,
  • Look up, it is nigh the redemption thou seekest.

    VIII.

  • Still WORK, though the tramp of the weird spirit‐horses,
  • Fall dull on the ear, like the clay upon corses;
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  • Still Freedom must send forth her young heroes glowing,
  • Though her standard be red with their life‐current flowing;
  • Still the preacher must cast forth the seed, as God’s sower,
  • Though he perish like grass at the scythe of the mower.

    IX.

  • Still do the Lord’s work through life’s tragical drama,
  • Though weeping goes upward like weeping at Rama;
  • The path may be thorny, but Spirit eyes see us;
  • The cross may be heavy, but Death will soon free us:
  • Still, strong in Christ’s power we’ll chant the Hosanna,
  • Fling down Christ’s defiance—Υπαγε Σατανα!

    X.

  • I see in a vision the shadowy portal,
  • That leadeth to regions of glory immortal;
  • I see the pale forms from the seven wounds bleeding,
  • Which up to God’s Throne the bright angels are leading;
  • I see the crown placed on each saint bending lowly,
  • While sounds the Trisagion—Holy, thrice Holy!

    XI.

  • I have Paradise dreams of a band with palm‐branches,
  • Whose wavings give back their gold harps’ resonances,
  • And a jewelled‐walled city, where walketh in splendour
  • Each one who his life for God’s truth did surrender.
  • Who would weep their death‐doom, if such bliss we inherit,
  • When the veil of the human falls off from the spirit?

    XII.

  • The Christian may shrink from the last scenes of trial,
  • And the woes yet unknown of each mystical vial;
  • But the hosts of Jehovah will gather beside him,
  • The rainbow‐crowned angel stoop downward to guide him;
  • And to him, who as hero and martyr hath striven,
  • Will the Crown, and the Throne, and the Palm‐branch be given.
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