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Poem by Richard Chenevix Trench


On the Results of the Last French Revolution


How long shall weary nations toil in blood,
How often roll the still returning stone
Up the sharp painful height, ere they will own
That on the base of individual good,
Of virtue, manners, and pure homes endued
With household graces--that on this alone
Shall social freedom stand--where these are gone,
There is a nation doomed to servitude?
O suffering, toiling France, thy toil is vain!
The irreversible decree stands sure,
Where men are selfish, covetous of gain,
Heady and fierce, unholy and impure,
Their toil is lost, and fruitless all their pain;
They cannot build a work which shall endure.



Richard Chenevix Trench


Richard Chenevix Trench's other poems:
  1. To the Same (Look, dearest, what a glory from the sun)
  2. Sonnet (What good soever in thy heart or mind)
  3. To the Same (O dowered with a searching glance to see)
  4. To the Same (We live not in our moments or our years)
  5. The Island of Madeira


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