Are any fit to rule, but Lords, the
groveling wretches, selfishe hordes
who, greedy-eyed, do wet their lips,
nor sated by gold-laden ships?
Then let the freedom bell to ring;
they melt it down, to forge a thing
more useful than a noble soul,
and suffer kings to pay a toll.
Their leaden hearts
that trample Arts
and flowers unto distant parts
discover now a wondrous land
and deign to count the grains of sand.
The lustre, fading, of mankind
shines all the brighter to the blind
that scramble, lowly, for to find
that knot the Mede could ne'er unwind.
This liberty's a funny thing
that doth compel the bird to sing;
the right to see the sunny day,
makes it, by right, the kitten's prey.
previously published in All Seasons (2021)