THE DYNAMITE DRAGON.

A dragon! Faugh! that foul and writhing Worm

Seems scarcely worthy of the ancient term

That fills old myth, and typifies the fight

'Twixt wrathful evil and the force of right.

The dragons of the prime, fierce saurian things

With ogre gorges and with harpy wings,

Fitted their hour; the haunts that gave them birth,

The semi-chaos of the early earth,

The slime, the earthquake shock, the whelming flood,

Made battle ground for the colossal brood.

But now, when centuries of love and light

Have warmed and brightened man's old home; when might

Is not all sinister, nor all desire

Fierce appetite, that all-devouring fire,—

When life is not alone a wasting scourge,

But from the swamps of soulless strife emerge

Some Pisgah peaks of promise where the dove

Finds footing, high the whirling gulfs above,—

Now the intrusion of this loathly shape,

With pestilence-breathing jaws that blackly gape

For indiscriminate prey, is sure a thing

To set celestial guards once more a-wing;

To fire a new St. Michael or St. George

With the bright death to cleave the monster's gorge,

And trample out the Laidly Worm's last breath

In the convulsions of reluctant death.

A crawling, craven, sneaking, snaking brute;

Purposeless spite, and hatred absolute,

In hideous shape incarnate! Venomed Gad

In Civilisation's path; malignant-mad,

And blindly biting; raising an asp-neck

In Beauty's foot-tracks, and prepared to wreck

The ordered work of ages in a day,

To raze and shatter, to abase and slay.

Blind as the earthquake, headlong as the storm,

Yet in such hideous subter-human form,

Vulgar as venomous! Dragon indeed,

And dangerous, but with no soul save greed,

No aim save chaos. Bloody, yet so blind,

The common enemy of humankind;

Whose age-stored works and ways it yearns to blast,

To smite to ruined fragments, and to cast

Prone—as itself is prone—in common dust.

The Beautiful, the Wise, the Strong, the Just,

All fruit of labour, and all spoil of thought,

All that co-operant Man hath won or wrought,

All that the heart has loved, the mind has taught

Through the long generations, hoarded gains

Of plastic fancies, and of potent brains;

Thrones, Temples, Marts, Art's alcoves, Learning's domes,

Patrician palaces, and bourgeois homes.

Down, down!—to glut its spleen, the paltry thing,

Impotent, save to lurk, and coil, and spring,

But powerful as the poison-drop, once sped,

That creeps, corrupts, and leaves its victim—dead!

As the asp's fang could turn to pulseless clay

The Pride of Egypt, so this Worm can slay

If left long covert for its crawling course.

Up, up against it every virile force,

And every valorous virtue! By its hiss

'Tis known hostis humani generis,

Let Civilisation snatch St. Michael's sword,

And slay this Dragon, of a tribe abhorred

The meanest and the most malignant Worm

Which can spill venom, but, attacked, will squirm,

Shrink, splutter, vanish. With no noble end,

All men must be its foes, blind hatred its sole friend!