<h4><SPAN name="THE_REVOLUTIONIST_OR_LINES_TO_A_STATESMAN" id="THE_REVOLUTIONIST_OR_LINES_TO_A_STATESMAN"></SPAN>THE REVOLUTIONIST: OR LINES TO A STATESMAN</h4>
<p>"<span class="font">I WAS NEVER STANDING BY WHILE A REVOLUTION</span><br/>
<span class="font">WAS GOING ON."</span>—<i>Speech by the Rt. Hon. Walter
Long</i>.<br/>
<br/>
When Death was on thy drums, Democracy,<br/>
And with one rush of slaves the world was free,<br/>
In that high dawn that Kings shall not forget,<br/>
A void there was and Walter was not yet.<br/>
Through sacked Versailles, at Valmy in the fray,<br/>
They did without him in some kind of way;<br/>
Red Christendom all Walterless they cross,<br/>
And in their fury hardly feel their loss....<br/>
Fades the Republic; faint as Roland's horn,<br/>
Her trumpets taunt us with a sacred scorn....<br/>
Then silence fell; and Mr. Long was born.<br/>
<br/>
From his first hours in his expensive cot<br/>
He never saw the tiniest viscount shot.<br/>
In deference to his wealthy parents' whim<br/>
The wildest massacres were kept from him.<br/>
The wars that dyed Pall Mall and Brompton red<br/>
Passed harmless o'er that one unconscious head:<br/>
For all that little Long could understand<br/>
The rich might still be rulers of the land.<br/>
Vain are the pious arts of parenthood,<br/>
Foiled Revolution bubbled in his blood;<br/>
Until one day (the babe unborn shall rue it)<br/>
The Constitution bored him and he slew it.<br/>
<br/>
If I were wise and good and rich and strong—<br/>
Fond, impious thought, if I were Walter Long—<br/>
If I could water sell like molten gold,<br/>
And make grown people do as they are told,<br/>
If over private fields and wastes as wide<br/>
As a Greek city for which heroes died,<br/>
I owned the houses and the men inside—<br/>
If all this hung on one thin thread of habit<br/>
I would not revolutionize a rabbit.<br/>
<br/>
I would sit tight with all my gifts and glories,<br/>
And even preach to unconverted Tories,<br/>
That the fixed system that our land inherits,<br/>
Viewed from a certain standpoint, has its merits.<br/>
I'd guard the laws like any Radical,<br/>
And keep each precedent, however small,<br/>
However subtle, misty, dusty, dreamy,<br/>
Lest man by chance should look at me and see me;<br/>
Lest men should ask what madman made me lord<br/>
Of English ploughshares and the English sword;<br/>
Lest men should mark how sleepy is the nod<br/>
That drills the dreadful images of God!<br/>
<br/>
Walter, be wise! avoid the wild and new,<br/>
The Constitution is the game for you.<br/>
Walter, beware! scorn not the gathering throng<br/>
It suffers, yet it may not suffer wrong,<br/>
It suffers, yet it cannot suffer Long.<br/>
And if you goad it these grey rules to break,<br/>
For a few pence, see that you do not wake<br/>
Death and the splendour of the scarlet cap,<br/>
Boston and Valmy, Yorktown and Jemmappes,<br/>
Freedom in arms, the riding and the routing,<br/>
The thunder of the captains and the shouting,<br/>
All that lost riot that you did not share—And<br/>
when that riot comes—you <i>will</i> be there.<br/>
<br/><br/></p>
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