O you, the Press! what good from you might
spring!
What power is yours to blast
a cause or bless!
I fear for you, as for some youthful king,
Lest you go wrong from power
in excess.
Take heed of your wide privileges! we
The thinking men of England, loathe a
tyranny.
A freeman is, I doubt not, freest here;
The single voice may speak
his mind aloud;
An honest isolation need not fear
The Court, the Church, the
Parliament, the crowd.
No, nor the Press! and look you well to
that—
We must not dread in you the nameless
autocrat.
And you, dark Senate of the public pen,
You may not, like yon tyrant,
deal in spies.
Yours are the public acts of public men,
But yours are not their household
privacies.
I grant you one of the great Powers on
earth,
But be not you the blatant traitors of
the hearth.
You hide the hand that writes: it
must be so,
For better so you fight for
public ends;
But some you strike can scarce return
the blow;
You should be all the nobler,
O my friends.
Be noble, you! nor work with faction’s
tools
To charm a lower sphere of
fulminating fools.
But knowing all your power to heat or
cool,
To soothe a civic wound or
keep it raw,
Be loyal, if you wish for wholesome rule:
Our ancient boast is this—we
reverence law.
We still were loyal in our wildest fights,
Or loyally disloyal battled for our rights.
O Grief and Shame if while I preach of
laws
Whereby to guard our Freedom
from offence—
And trust an ancient manhood and the cause
Of England and her health
of commonsense—
There hang within the heavens a dark disgrace,
Some vast Assyrian doom to burst upon
our race.
I feel the thousand cankers of our State,
I fain would shake their triple-folded
ease,
The hogs who can believe in nothing great,
Sneering bedridden in the
down of Peace
Over their scrips and shares, their meats
and wine,
With stony smirks at all things human
and divine!
I honour much, I say, this man’s
appeal.
We drag so deep in our commercial
mire,
We move so far from greatness, that I
feel
Exception to be character’d
in fire.
Who looks for Godlike greatness here shall
see
The British Goddess, sleek Respectability.
Alas for her and all her small delights!
She feels not how the social
frame is rack’d.
She loves a little scandal which excites;
A little feeling is a want
of tact.
For her there lie in wait millions of
foes,
And yet the ‘not too much’
is all the rule she knows.
Poor soul! behold her: what decorous
calm!
She, with her week-day worldliness
sufficed,
Stands in her pew and hums her decent
psalm
With decent dippings at the
name of Christ!
And she has mov’d in that smooth
way so long,
She hardly can believe that
she shall suffer wrong.