TO THE NEUTRAL NATIONS.

If you elect to stay outside

And run no risk, on shore or sea,

Where men for all men's sake have died

In this the War of Liberty

(The same whose figure points the pilot's way,

Larger than life, in New York Bay);—

If you prefer to fold your hands

And watch us, at your guarded ease,

Straining our strength to sweep the lands

Clean of a deadly foul disease,

Which must, unless our courage find a cure,

Fall on your children, swift and sure;—

Stay out by all means; none shall ask

The help that your free will declined;

We'll bear as best we may the task

That duty's call to us assigned;

And you shall reap, ungrudged, in happier years

The harvest of our blood and tears.

Only—when this long fight is done,

And, breathing Freedom's purer air,

You share the vantage we have won—

Think not the honour, too, to share;

The honour shall be theirs and theirs alone

By whom the thrall was overthrown.

Meanwhile a boon: if not your swords,

Give us your sympathy at need;

Show us the friendship which affords

At least to let its pockets bleed;

And get your tradesmen kindly to forgo

Their traffic with a common foe.

O. S.