THE FOURTH OF JULY

BY CHARLES LEONARD MOORE

(From The Forum.)

Let be the herds and what the harvest brings;

Give to oblivion all that’s sold and bought,

The count of unrememberable things;—

Our better birthright is this day’s report!

Live our sires in us? Keep we their old skill

To know Occasion’s whisper and be great?

Can our proud blood in one contagious thrill

Put admiration in the eyes of Fate?

Wide is our realm, and twin seas feel our yoke,

Aye, and the oarless ocean of the North;—

Are we then mightier than that scattered folk,

That fringe of clingers by the sea-beach froth

Whose loins begat us? Let to-morrow show

If their stern arts hereditary grow.