The Poetry Corner

The Fury Of Discord

By John Carr (Sir)

In a chariot of fire, thro Hell's flaming arch, The Fury of Discord appear'd; A myriad of demons attended her march, And in Gallia her standard she rear'd. Thy name, so enchanting, sweet Freedom! she took, But in vain did she try to assume Thy smile of content, thy enlivening look, And thy roseate mountainous bloom. For wan was her visage, and phrensied her eye, At her girdle a poniard she wore; Her bosom and limbs were expos'd to the sky, And her robe was besprinkled with gore. Nature shudder'd, and sigh'd as the wild rabble past, Each flow'r droop'd its beautiful head; The groves became dusky, and moan'd in the blast, And Virtue and Innocence fled. She rose from her car 'midst the yell of her crew; Emblazon'd, a scroll she unfurl'd, And on it the dreams of Philosophy drew; "'Tis the Charter, she cried, of the World." Plunder, keen-ey'd and lean, rang with plaudits the sky, Murder grinn'd as he whetted his steel; While Blasphemy swore the Redeemer on high Was the creature of Folly and Zeal. The scaffold grew red with the blood of the brave, Kings turn'd pale on their thrones at her nod; While Loyalty fled to the gloom of the cave, And Piety knelt to her God. At length, after changing her chiefs at her will, As their mischievous zeal grew remiss, She sought a fresh fav'rite, with dexterous skill, From Obscurity's darkest abyss. The pow'rs of her monstrous adoption to try, 'Midst, Syria! thy waterless waste, She bade him the blast of thy desert outvie, And defile all thy relics of taste. The chieftain obey'd: with a merciful air He wrung from thy natives a tear; But the justice and valour of Britain, e'en there, Shook his legions, recoiling with fear. Well-pleas'd with his crimes, the Fury, with flight, To her empire safe wafted him o'er; Whilst the spectres of Jaffa, with ghastly delight, The murd'rer pursued to the shore. Arriv'd, for his brow, lo! a turban she made, Bright with gems pluck'd from Gallia's crown; To give him a name, she Rome's hist'ry survey'd, In the days of her early renown. To embellish his guilt, or to soften its shade, The Arts mournful captives she kept; And the plund'rer and plunder of Europe display'd To the wand'rer, who wonder'd and wept. To support this apostate imperial shade, This impious mock'ry of good, She rais'd a banditti, to whom she convey'd His spirit for plunder and blood. The chiefs of the earth in a panic beheld The flash of his sabre afar; They enter'd, but pensively mov'd from the field, And bow'd to this idol of war. Till, fum'd with the incense of slavish applause, O'er the globe's fairest portion he trod; And, spurning its liberty, spirit, and laws, Conceiv'd himself rais'd to a god. But England disdain'd to the Tyrant to bend; Still erect, undismay'd, she was found; Infuriate, he swore that "his bolt should descend," And her temples should fall to the ground. Yes, here, if his banner is destin'd to wave, It shall float o'er her temples laid low, O'er piles of her children, who, loyal and brave, Such a victory never will know. Oh! banish the thought; for, learn 'tis in vain, Thus, thou maniac Tyrant, to boast; As soon shall her base be remov'd by the main, As her empire by thee and thy host. The sound is gone forth, 'tis recorded above, To the mountain it spread from the vale; "Our God, and our King, and our Country, we love, And for them we will die or prevail." Then hasten the day, if thy threat be sincere, Let the winds blow thy myriads along; Then soon may thy boasted armada appear, And our rocks catch thy death-breathing song. Thy guardian, foul deity! hideous with crime, Shall view, as she moves to our shore, The Genius of Britain, mild, brave, and sublime, And shall boast her achievements no more. Oh! direful and strange will the contest appear, Big with freedom to nations afar; The good, who confide, and the guilty, who fear, Shall join in the conflict of war. In Heaven, with smiles, shall the happy and blest Lean over its bright-beaming walls, To guide and support to the regions of rest The soul of the patriot who falls. Britannia! thy Muse, on a rock high and steep, The fate of the fight shall proclaim; The strings of her lyre Inspiration shall sweep, Recording each hero by name. The world to its centre shall shake with delight, As thus she announces their fall; "They sink! our invaders submit to our might, The ocean has buried them all!"