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Title: On The Capitulation Of Warsaw, September 1831
Author: Charles Mackay [ More Titles by Mackay]
Soldier of Poland! wherefore sigh? Freedom, though crushed, shall never die; Though for awhile her noble head Be trampled by the Cossack's tread. Though the proud Russian lay her low, And laugh to scorn a nation's woe; Though those whom free-born hearts deplore, Be banished from their native shore, And forced in foreign climes to roam, To seek a shelter and a home; Though thousand wrongs obscure her yet, The sun of Freedom shall not set! From Warsaw's ruins shall arise A fire to blind the Tartars' eyes; A voice shall sound from Praga's plain, To rouse the nations up again! A flag of wrath shall be unfurled, And Justice once more light the world!
[The end] Charles Mackay's poem: On The Capitulation Of Warsaw, September 1831 ________________________________________________
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