John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892). The Poetical Works in Four Volumes. 1892.
Anti-Slavery PoemsIn War Time
The Mantle of St. John de Matha
A
Calm, terrible, and bright,
The cross in blended red and blue
Upon his mantle white!
Each on his broken chain,
Sang praise to God who raiseth
The dead to life again?
“Wear this,” the Angel said;
“Take thou, O Freedom’s priest, its sign,—
The white, the blue, and red.”
In the strength the Lord Christ gave,
And begged through all the land of France
The ransom of the slave.
Before him open flew,
The drawbridge at his coming fell,
The door-bolt backward drew.
And paid his righteous tax;
And the hearts of lord and peasant
Were in his hands as wax.
His bark her anchor weighed,
Freighted with seven-score Christian souls
Whose ransom he had paid.
Her sails in tatters hung;
And on the wild waves, rudderless,
A shattered hulk she swung.
“For naught can man avail;
Oh, woe betide the ship that lacks
Her rudder and her sail!
At sea we sink or strand:
There ’s death upon the water,
There ’s death upon the land!”
“God’s errands never fail!
Take thou the mantle which I wear,
And make of it a sail.”
The blue, the white, the red;
And straight before the wind off-shore
The ship of Freedom sped.
“For vain is mortal skill:
The good ship on a stormy sea
Is drifting at its will.”
“My mariners, never fear!
The Lord whose breath has filled her sail
May well our vessel steer!”
They drove for weary hours;
And lo! the third gray morning shone
On Ostia’s friendly towers.
The ship of mercy knew,—
They knew far off its holy cross,
The red, the white, and blue.
Rang out in glad accord,
To welcome home to Christian soil
The ransomed of the Lord.
By bard and painter told;
And lo! the cycle rounds again,
The new is as the old!
And sails by traitors torn,
Our country on a midnight sea
Is waiting for the morn.
Behind, the pirate foe;
The clouds are black above her,
The sea is white below.
The dread of all who wrong,
She drifts in darkness and in storm,
How long, O Lord! how long?
Ye shall not suffer wreck,
While up to God the freedman’s prayers
Are rising from your deck.
Which God hath blest anew,
The mantle that De Matha wore,
The red, the white, the blue?
The red of sunset’s dye,
The whiteness of the moon-lit cloud,
The blue of morning’s sky.
For daylight and for land;
The breath of God is in your sail,
Your rudder is His hand.
With blessings and with hopes;
The saints of old with shadowy hands
Are pulling at your ropes.
Uplift the palm and crown;
Before ye unborn ages send
Their benedictions down.
God’s errands never fail!
Sweep on through storm and darkness,
The thunder and the hail!
The port ye yet shall win;
And all the bells of God shall ring
The good ship bravely in!