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John Douglas Sutherland Campbell Poems >>
The Armada Gun

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An ancient cannon, finely cast.
  Of bronze, all smooth and green with age,
  A by-gone actor on the stage,
Yet fit to take, as in the past
A role in war, and be the last
  Dread argument of kings!

The daisies grew around, and brought
  The homage of young spring to praise
  This stately relic of old days,
When France with Spain for mastery fought;
And Philip over England sought
  To spread the Papal wings.

Initialed with King Francis’ name,
  With Gallic lilies sculptured o’er,
  Above the vent the metal bore
A Salamander crowned, in flame;
The massive breech could even claim
  A sheath of lotos bloom.

This goodly weapon, forged where Seine
  By Fontainebleau and Paris flows,
  And many a painted Palace shows
These emblems of the Valois’ reign,
For centuries unseen has lain
  Within the sea’s dark tomb.

How came it there? A Spanish keel
  One of the Great Armada gay,
  Was blasted in Our Lady’s Bay;
One of the Fleet the floods conceal,
Though o’er the waves was wont to peal
  The thunder of their pride.

But how came France’s lilies there
  Beneath the flag of red and gold?
  And o’er the ancient gun we told
The story which the legends bear,
How in defeat it bore its share
  And stemmed the Victory’s tide.

We thought the winds of hollow sound
  Spoke from its mouth in solemn tone,
  Of great events its life had known,
That thronged, as with the nearly drowned,
To recollection, ere it found
  Beneath the sea a grave.

“‘In flame I live, I quench its glow;’
  This motto at the foundry fire
  Was given me by his desire,
The king, whose crest and lilies show
How love and valour could bestow
  Their favour on the brave.

“My form was fashioned in each part
  By him who wrought in gems and gold,
  Whose glory, trumpet-tongued, is told
In fearful wars, in peaceful Art,
Cellini of the ardent heart,
  And Benvenuto named!

“The silver-voiced and laughing crowd
  Of ladies praised his fair design
  And asked if on the German Rhine,
Or English coasts of fog and cloud,
Would soon be heard my challenge loud
  For rights our country claimed?

“To conquer fair Milan I threw
  My shot against the Swiss array
  On Marignano’s dreadful day:
On sledges hardy soldiers drew
My weight through snows, where eagles knew
  Alone the Alpine way.

“And warring for the emperor’s crown,
 I saw around me fall and die
 The noblest of our chivalry:
When peerless Bayard’s high renown
Quenched not his blood, that streaming down
 Fell on me where I lay.

“Pavia felt my iron hail,
 When traitor Bourbon won the fight,
 Yet glad was I no foreign knight
Alone had made our siege to fail,
When wrote our king the dismal tale,
 ‘Save honour all is lost!’

“The impious victor hurled my fire
 Against the walls of holy Rome,
 But there the devil took him home!
For at the storm my artist sire,
Cellini, felled him, for the ire
 Of God his path had crossed.

“To nobler masters still a slave,
 I felt the fame of Doria mine;
 Saw Venice o’er her channels shine;
Pursued the Moslem on the wave,
And shattered them, when victory gave
 Her palm to Malta’s isle.

“When Naples sent her ships to swell
  The swarming armaments that bore
  ‘Gainst England from each southern shore
In fleets whose numbers none could tell;
I saw how Drake upon us fell,
  How fortune ceased to smile.

“For tempests gathered o’er our track,
  The little English hornets stung,
  My heavy shot against them flung
Passed o’er their barks, so swift to tack,
And every ball they gave us back
  Upon our galleons told.

“Soon drifting o’er the Northern main
  Grey shores unknown were quickly past;
  Our consorts on the rocks were cast,
It was our fate alone to gain
The peaceful haven where Maclaine
  Set fire unto our hold.

I sank: a hundred years past by,
  And diving bells with searchers keen
  For treasure in the wreck were seen.
They took the gold, but let me lie
To sleep another century,
  Then raised and brought me here.

   *   *   *   *   *

“Valois is dead, and Bourbon’s Line
  No longer fills my country’s throne.
  But death dear France shall never own!
Once more of late her joy was mine,
Once more for her my flames could shine,
  My thunder echo clear.

“For when the tide of battle rolled
  Against the far Crimean shore,
  And France and Britain downward bore
The Russian in his chosen hold,
My last salute of victory told
  For France, as oft of yore!”

(John Douglas Sutherland Campbell)

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