Page:Grierson Herbert - First Half of the Seventeenth Century.djvu/50

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30
EUROPEAN LITERATURE—1600-1660.

But Vondel is more effective and felicitous in the shorter and intenser satires. These were not, like Justice. Huyghens', composed on the classical model, but are rather political squibs, popular songs and ballads, often in the nasal Amsterdam dialect, or short, pithy, epigrammatic copies of verses. Indignation has seldom inspired more burning lines than the short and famous Geuse Vesper of Sieckentroost on the execution of Oldenbarneveldt:—

      "Did he bear the fate of Holland
                 On his heart,
       To the latest breath he drew
                 With bitter smart;
       Thus to lave a perjured sword
                 With stainless blood,
       And to batten crow and raven
                 On his good?

       Was it well to carve that neck
                 Within whose veins
       Age the loyal blood had withered?
                 'Mong his gains
       Were not found the Spanish pistoles
                 Foul with treason,
       Strewn to whet the mob's wild hate,
                 That knows no reason.

       But the Cruelty and Greed
                 Which plucked the sword
       Ruthless from the sheath, now mourns
                 With bitter word;
       What avails for us, alas! that
                 Blood and gain
       Now to dull Remorse's cruel
                 Gnawing pain?