“Now blood for tears! my sword,
my sword!
Be thou unsheath’d in
Naples’ cause,
I’ll meet again the battle horde,
And beard the bravest of my
foes!
“Proud Austria! I will drive
thee back,
Deem not that Naples’
throne is thine;
For soon shall Murat’s bivouac
Keep watch upon thy tented
line.
“Nor taunt of enemy shall move,
Nor bitterest suffering shall
degrade,
My heart—for with my people’s
love
My daring will be richly paid.
“Hearts like my own! that hem me
now,
The ground we tread is sacred
earth,
Prove not the soil from which ye sprang
Unworthy of Napoleon’s
birth.
“On to the struggle! we shall gain
Adherents to our patriot cause;
Shake off the exile’s hated name,
And abrogate the despot’s
laws.
“Insulted, wrong’d, and robb’d
of all,
My feelings scarce could brook
my fate;
But I will gain my crown or fall
Before degraded Naples’
gate!”
Midnight descended on Calabria’s
coast,
And Murat’s little fleet wore sailing
there;
No peering moon lit up the lonely sea,
But all was sable as his wayward fate.
A storm dispers’d them, and Sardinia’s
isle
Receiv’d the bark that held the
hapless king,
And morn beheld it on the main again;
But far apart his faithful followers.
Calabria’s beach was gain’d;
where Murat stood
Amidst the dastard throng that hemm’d
him round,
With heart of adamant, and eye of fire.
There is a majesty in kingly hearts
Which changing time nor fickle fate can
quell:
He stood—reveal’d from
his own lips, “The King
Of fallen Naples.” At those
stirring words
A hundred swords unsheath’d; for
on his head
A princely price was set, and flight he
scorn’d;
For grasp’d his hand the well-accustom’d
blade;
And vainly fought—
* * * * *
His hour is come! behold the dauntless
man
Baring his bosom to the stern platoon:
And parted friends, and pardon’d
enemies,
Relinquish’d glory, and forgotten
scorn,
Are naught to him—but o’er
his war-worn face
A momentary gleam of passion flits—
To think that he who wore that diadem
The second Caesar placed upon his brows,
(No cold inheritance of legal right,
But truly bought by bravery and blood.)
Should die with traitor branded on, his
fame.
His hand enfolds a small cornelian seal,
A portrait of his queen,—on
which his eyes
Are fondly fix’d. The final
word is given,
And Murat falls: ah! who would be
a king!
* * H.
* * * * *
COAST BLOCKADE MEN.
(For the Mirror.)