Page:The Emigrants.pdf/28

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

[ 24 ]

And that high consciousness of noble blood,
Which he has learn'd from infancy to think
Exalts him o'er the race of common men:
Nurs'd in the velvet lap of luxury,
And fed by adulation­—could he learn,
That worth alone is true Nobility?
And that the peasant who, "amid5[1] the sons
"Of Reason, Valour, Liberty, and Virtue,
"Displays distinguish'd merit, is a Noble
"Of Nature's own creation!"—­If even here,
If in this land of highly vaunted Freedom,
Even Britons controvert the unwelcome truth,
Can it be relish'd by the sons of France?
Men, who derive their boasted ancestry
From the fierce leaders of religious wars,
The first in Chivalry's emblazon'd page;