Page:The Domestic Affections, and Other Poems.pdf/149



'Twas this that illumin'd the fields of the fight, When the Chief of Vimeira was matchless in might; In lightning effulgence at Baylen it stream'd, At Corunna, the zenith of glory, it beam'd   O'er the warrior, the patriot, the dead!

O Albion! my throne, and my temple of rest, Fair light of the waves! lovely star of the west! Ever steady, resplendent, the same; Thou shrine of my spirit! thou land of my heart! Where life, inspiration, and hope I impart; Behold where my cynosure brilliant appears, And beams thro' the mist-veil of darkness and tears, To guide thee to conquest and fame!

Oh! thou art my guardian! supreme o'er the sea! Still foremost, undaunted, to combat for me, Thou planet! thou empress of isles! Oh! fearless in danger, awake at my call: Shall the standard, the altar of Liberty, fall?