Men of England! who inherit By the foes ye've fought uncounted, Yet remember, England gathers What are monuments of bravery, Pageants!—let the world revere us Yours are Hampden's Russell's glory, We're the sons of sires that baffled CAMPBELL.[Notes: Thomas Campbell, born 1777, died 1844. Author of the 'Pleasures of Hope,' 'Gertrude of Wyoming,' and many lyrics. His poetry is careful, scholarlike and polished. Men whose undegenerate spirit, &c. In prose, this would run, "(Ye) men whose spirit has been proved (to be) undegenerate," &c. The word "undegenerate," which is introduced only as an epithet, is the real predicate of the sentence. By the foes ye've fought uncounted. "Uncounted" agreeing with "foes." Fruitless wreaths of fame. A poetical figure, taken from the wreaths of laurel given as prizes in the ancient games of Greece. "Past history will give fame to a country, but nothing more fruitful than fame, unless its virtues are kept alive." Trophied temples, i.e., Temples hung (after the fashion of the ancients) with trophies. Arch, i.e., the triumphal arch erected by the Romans in honour of victorious generals. Pageants = "these are nought but pageants." And (for) the beasts of civic heroes. Civic heroes, those who have striven for the rights of their fellow citizens. Hampden, i.e., John Hampden (born 1594, died 1643), the maintainer of the rights of the people in the reign of Charles I. He resisted the imposition of ship-money, and died in a skirmish at Chalgrove during the Civil War. Russell, i.e., Lord William Russell, beheaded in 1683, in the reign of Charles II. on a charge of treason. He had resisted the Court in its aims at establishing the doctrine of passive obedience. Sydney, i.e., Algernon Sydney. The friend of Russell, who met with the same fate in the same year. Sydney's matchless shade. Shade = spirit or memory. Agincourt. The victory won by Henry V. in France, in 1415. Crown'd and mitred tyranny. Explain this.] * * * * * |