Saxon Grit.

Rev. Robert Collyer.

Worn by the battle, by Stamford town,

Fighting the Norman by Hastings bay;

Harold, the Saxon’s sun, went down

When the acorns were falling one autumn day.

Then the Norman said: “I am lord of the land,

By tenure of conquest here I sit;

I will rule you now with the iron hand;”

But he had not thought of the Saxon grit.

He took the land, and he took the men,

And burnt the homesteads from Trent to Tyne;

Made the freemen serfs by a stroke of the pen;

Ate up the corn and drank the wine.

From the Saxon heart rose a mighty roar,

Our life shall not be by the king’s permit,—

We will fight for the right; we want no more.

Then the Norman found out the Saxon grit.

For slow and sure as the oaks had grown

From the acorns falling that autumn day,

So the Saxon manhood in thorpe and town

To a nobler nature grew alway.

Winning by inches, holding by clinches,

Standing by law and the human right;

Many times failing, never once quailing,

So the new day came out of the night.

Then rising afar in the western sea

A new world stood in the morn of the day,

Ready to welcome the brave and free,

Who would wrench out the heart, and march away

From the narrow, contracted, dear old land,

Where the poor are held by a cruel bit,

To ampler spaces for heart and hand;

And here was a chance for the Saxon grit.

Steadily steering, eagerly peering,

Trusting in God, your fathers came,

Pilgrims and strangers, fronting all dangers,

Cool-headed Saxons, with hearts aflame,

Bound by the letter, but free from the fetter,

And hiding their freedom in holy writ,

They gave Deuteronomy hints in economy,

And made a new Moses of Saxon grit,

They whittled and waded through forest and fen,

Fearless as ever of what might befall,

Pouring out life for the nurture of men

In the faith that by manhood the world views all.

Inventing baked beans and no end of machines,

Great with the rifle, and great with the ax,

Sending their notions over the oceans

To fill empty stomachs and straighten bent backs;

Swift to take chances that end in the dollar,

Yet open of hand when the dollar is made;

Maintaining the meeting, exalting the scholar,

But a little too anxious about a good trade.

This is young Jonathan, son of old John,

Positive, peaceable, firm in the right.

Saxon men all of us, may we be one,

Steady for freedom and strong in her might.

Then slow and sure, as the oaks have grown

From the acorns that fell on the dim old day,

So this new manhood, in city and town,

To a nobler stature will grow alway.

Winning by inches, holding by clinches,

Slow to contention and slower to quit,

Now and then failing, but never once quailing,

Let us thank God for the Saxon grit.