Page:The city of dreadful night - and other poems (IA cityofdreadfulni00thomrich).pdf/156

 It is hopeless; right is wrong; The tyrant is too strong."

Must a man have hope to fight? Can a man not fight in despair? Must the soul cower down for the body's weakness, And slaver the devil's hoof with meekness, Nor care nor dare to share Certain defeat with the right?

They do not know us, my Mother! They know not our love, our hate! And how we would die with each other, Embracing proud and elate, Rather than live apart In peace with shame in the heart.

No hope!—If a heavy anger Our God hath treasured against us long, His lightning-shafts from His thunder-clangour Raining a century down: We have loved when we went most wrong; He cannot for ever frown.

No hope!-We can haste to be killed, That the tale of the victims get filled;