Caroline Norton

The Rebel

WITH none to heed or mark
The prisoner in his cell,
In a dungeon, lone and dark,
He tuned his wild farewell.
The harp whose strings might never breathe again
The joyous sounds it gave to Freedom’s strain,
With hurried chords, his trembling fingers woke;
And thus the brave, but captive rebel spoke:—
 
Farewell! mine own dear land!
That I have loved thee well,
This faint, but blood-red hand,
These iron fetters tell:
And if I weep, it is not for the breeze,
At summer evenings whispered thro’ the trees;
Though I would die to breathe that air again—
I weep, to think upon my country’s chain!
 
Farewell to those I loved,
Whom I no more shall see;
And, oh! in sorrow proved,
To those who once loved me,
With whom beneath the chesnut’s spreading shade
In happy days of infancy, I played;
Who never more will hear the rebel’s name
Without a blush, a crimson blush, of shame.
 
Oh! I am young to die,
Forsaken thus by all:
With none to hear me sigh,
With none to weep my fall.
How my heart yearns for joys for ever flown—
My mother’s hand—my sister’s gentle tone!
And wishes wild within my bosom swell,
In sorrow’s broken tones to bid farewell!
 
Land of untrodden hills!
Where still, in happy dreams,
I hear the mountain rills,
Leap forth in gushing streams:
I love thee so, that fearfully I shrink
From death, whose power will burst each galling link;
And sigh to live, though life no more be free,
Lest, in the grave, I dream no more of thee!
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