Tribute to Gladstone

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Tribute to Gladstone
by Gilbert Keith Chesterton

The following was printed in a collection of tributes to W. E. Gladstone following his death in May 1898. It was edited by Samuel Jacob and Chas F. Forshaw and Published by Elliot Stock.

113109Tribute to GladstoneGilbert Keith Chesterton

Lift up your heads; in life, in death,
God knoweth his head was high;
Quit we the coward's broken breath,
Who watched a strong man die.

If ye must say "No more his peer
Cometh: the flag is furled,"
Stand not too near him; lest we hear
That slander on the world

The good green earth he loved and trod
Is still, with many a scar,
Writ in the chronicles of God
A giant-bearing star.

He fell: but Britain's banner swings
Above his sunken crown;
Black Death shall have his toil of kings
Before the cross goes down.

O young ones of a darker day,
In Art's wan colours clad,
Whose very love and hate are grey,
Whose very sin is sad,

Pass on: one agony long-drawn
Was merrier than your mirth;
When hand in hand came death and dawn
And spring was on the earth.