A Song of the Huguenots

Thomas Babington Macaulay

O, weep for Moucontour! 0, weep for the hour
When the children of darkness and evil had power;
When the horsemen of Valois triumphantly trod
On the bosoms that bled for their rights and their God!

O, weep for Moncontour! O, weep for the slain
Who for faith and for freedom lay slaughtered in vain!
O, weep for the living, who linger to bear
The renegade's shame or the exile's despair!

One look, one last look, to the cots and the towers,
To the rows of our vines, and the beds of our flowers.
To the church where the bones of our fathers decayed,
Where we fondly had deemed that our own should be laid.

Alas! we must leave thee, dear desolate home,
To the spearmen of Uri, the shavelings of Rome,
To the serpent of Florence, the vulture of Spain,
To the pride of Anjou, and the guile of Lorraine.

Farewell to thy fountain, farewell to thy shades.
To the song of thy youths and the dance of thy maids
To the breath of thy garden, the hum of thy bees.
And the long waving line of the blue Pyrenees.

Farewell, and forever! The priest and the slave
May rule in the halls of the free and the brave; —
Our hearths we abandon; our lands we resign;
But, Father, we kneel to no altar but thine.


Main Location:

Moncontour, France