XV.—OUR TITLES.

1. Are we not Nobles? we who trace

Our Pedigree[113] so high,

That God for us and for our race

Created Earth and Sky,

And Light, and Air, and Time, and Space,

To serve us, and then die.

2. Are we not Princes? we who stand

As heirs beside the Throne;

We who can call the promised land

Our Heritage,[114] our own;

And answer to no less command

Than God’s, and His alone.

3. Are we not Kings? both night and day,

From early until late,

About our bed, about our way,

A guard of Angels wait;

And so we watch, and work, and pray

In more than royal state.

4. Are we not holy? do not start;

It is God’s sacred will

To call us Temples set apart

His Holy Ghost may fill;

Our very food.... Oh hush, my heart,

Adore It and be still!

5. Are we not more? Our life shall be

Immortal[115] and divine;

The nature Mary gave to Thee,

Dear Jesus, still is Thine;

Adoring in Thy Heart I see

Such blood as beats in mine.

6. O God! that we can dare to fail,

And dare to say we must!

O God, that we can ever trail

Such banners in the dust,

Can let such starry honors pale,

And such a Blazon[116] rust!

7. Shall we upon such Titles bring

The taint of sin and shame?

Shall we, the children of the King

Who hold so grand a claim,

Tarnish, by any meaner thing,

The glory of our name?

[113] Pedˊ-i-gree, lineage, line of descent from a progenitor.

[114] Herˊ-it-age, an estate that passes from an ancestor to an heir.

[115] Im-morˊ-tal, exempt from death.

[116] Blaˊ-zon, a coat of arms.