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1807–1892

THE DISENTHRALLED.

John Greenleaf Whittier

HE had bowed down to drunkenness, An abject worshipper The pride of manhood's pulse had grown Too faint and cold to stir;

And he had given his spirit up To the unblessed thrall, And bowing to the poison cup, He gloried in his fall!

There came a change — the cloud rolled off, And light fell on his brain — And like the passing of a dream That cometh not again,

The shadow of the spirit fled. He saw the gulf before, He shuddered at the waste behind, And was a man once more.

He shook the serpent folds away, That gathered round his heart, As shakes the swaying forest-oak Its poison vine apart;

He stood erect; returning pride Grew terrible within, And conscience sat in judgment, on His most familiar sin.

The light of Intellect again Along his pathway shone; And Reason like a monarch sat Upon his olden throne.

The honored and the wise once more Within his presence came; And lingered oft on lovely lips His once forbidden name.

There may be glory in the might, That treadeth nations down; Wreaths for the crimson conqueror, Pride for the kingly crown;

But nobler is that triumph hour, The disenthralled shall find, When evil passion boweth down, Unto the Godlike mind.

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THE DISENTHRALLED. · John Greenleaf Whittier · Poetry Cove