The Poetry Corner

Cromwell

By Henry Lawson

They took dead Cromwell from his grave, And stuck his head on high; The Merry Monarch and his men, They laughed as they passed by The common people cheered and jeered, To Englands deep disgrace, The crowds whod neer have dared to look Live Cromwell in the face. He came in Englands direst need With law and fire and sword, He thrashed her enemies at home And crushed her foes abroad; He kept his word by sea and land, His parliament he schooled, He made the nations understand A Man in England ruled! Van Tromp, with twice the English ships, And flushed by victory, A great broom to his masthead bound, Set sail to sweep the sea. But Englands ruler was a man Who needed lots of room, So Blake soon lowered the Dutchmans tone, And smashed the Dutchmans broom. He sent a bill to Tuscany For sixty thousand pounds, For wrong done to his subjects there, And merchants in her bounds. He sent by Debt Collector Blake, And, you need but be told That, by the Duke of Tuscany That bill was paid in gold. To pirate ports in Africa He sent a message grim To have each captured Englishman Delivered up to him; And every ship and cargos worth, And every boat and gun, And this, all this, as Dickens says, Was gloriously done. Theyd tortured English prisoners Whod sailed the Spanish Main; So Cromwell sent a little bill By Admiral Blake to Spain. To keep his hand in, by the way. He whipped the Portuguese; And he made it safe for English ships To sail the Spanish seas. The Protestants in Southern lands Had long been sore oppressed; They sent their earnest prayers to Noll To have their wrongs redressed. He sent a message to the Powers, In which he told them flat, All men must praise God as they chose, Or he would see to that. And, when hed hanged the fools at home And settled foreign rows, He found the time to potter round Amongst his pigs and cows. Of private rows he never spoke, That grand old Ironsides. They said a fathers strong heart broke When Cromwells daughter died. (They dragged his body from its grave, His head stuck on a pole, They threw his wifes and daughters bones Into a rubbish hole To rot with those of two whod lived And fought for Englands sake, And each one in his own brave way, Great Pym, and Admiral Blake.) From Charles to Charles, throughout the world Old Englands name was high, And thats a thing no Royalist Could ever yet deny. Long shameful years have passed since then, In spite of Englands boast, But Englishmen were Englishmen, While Cromwell carved the roast. And, in my countrys hour of need, For it shall surely come, While run by fools wholl never heed The beating of the drum. While baffled by the fools at home, And threatened from the sea, Lord! send a man like Oliver, And let me live to see.