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ch alone has weight With Him whom wind, and waves, and war, obey, Persist. Are others subtle? Thou be wise: Above the Florentine's court-science raise; Stand forth a patriot of the moral world; The pattern, and the patron, of the just: Thus strengthen Britain's military strength; Give its own terror to the sword she draws. Ask you, "What mean I?"--The most obvious truth; Armies and fleets alone ne'er won the day. When our proud arms are once disarm'd, disarm'd Of aid from Him by whom the mighty fall; Of aid from Him by whom the feeble stand; Who takes away the keenest edge of battle, Or gives the sword commission to destroy; Who blasts, or bids the martial laurel bloom-- Emasculated, then, most manly might; Or, though the might remains, it nought avails: Then wither'd weakness foils the sinewy arm Of man's meridian and high-hearted power: Our naval thunders, and our tented fields With travel'd banners fanning southern climes, What do they? This; and more what can they do? When heap'd the measure of a kingdom's crimes, The prince most dauntless, the first plume of war, By such bold inroads into foreign lands, Such elongation of our armaments, But stretches out the guilty nation's neck, While Heaven commands her executioner, Some less abandon'd nation, to discharge Her full-ripe vengeance in a final blow, And tell the world, "Not strong is human strength; And that the proudest empire holds of Heaven." O Britain! often rescued, often crown'd, Beyond thy merit and most sanguine hopes, With all that's great in war, or sweet in peace! Know from what source thy signal blessings flow. Though bless'd with spirits ardent in the field, Though cover'd various oceans with thy fleets, Though fenc'd with rocks, and moated by the main, Thy trust repose in a far stronger guard; In Him, who thee, though naked, could defend; Tho' weak, could strengthen; ruin'd, could restore. How oft, to tell what arm defends thine isle, To guard her welfare, and yet check her pride, Have the winds snatch'd the victory from war? Or, rather, won the day, when war despair'd? How oft has providential succour aw'd, Aw'd while it bless'd us, conscious of our guilt; Struck dead all confidence in human aid, And, while we triumph'd, made us tremble too! Well may we tremble now; what manners reign? But wherefore ask we, when a true reply
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