The Poetry Corner

Tyranny.

By Sidney Lanier

"Spring-germs, spring-germs, I charge you by your life, go back to death. This glebe is sick, this wind is foul of breath. Stay: feed the worms. "Oh! every clod Is faint, and falters from the war of growth And crumbles in a dreary dust of sloth, Unploughed, untrod. "What need, what need, To hide with flowers the curse upon the hills, Or sanctify the banks of sluggish rills Where vapors breed? "And - if needs must - Advance, O Summer-heats! upon the land, And bake the bloody mould to shards and sand And dust. "Before your birth, Burn up, O Roses! with your dainty flame. Good Violets, sweet Violets, hide shame Below the earth. "Ye silent Mills, Reject the bitter kindness of the moss. O Farms! protest if any tree emboss The barren hills. "Young Trade is dead, And swart Work sullen sits in the hillside fern And folds his arms that find no bread to earn, And bows his head. "Spring-germs, spring-germs, Albeit the towns have left you place to play, I charge you, sport not. Winter owns to-day, Stay: feed the worms." Prattville, Alabama, 1868.