Page:The Collected Works of Theodore Parker Politics volume 4 .djvu/195

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JOHN QUINCY ADAMS.
183

"Where slavery's minions cower
Before the servile power,
He bore their ban;
And, like the aged oak,
That braved the lightning's stroke,
When thunders round it broke,
Stood up a man.

"Nay, when they stormed aloud,
And round him like a cloud.
Came thick and black,—
He single-handed strove,
And, like Olympian Jove,
With his own thunder drove
The phalanx back.

"Not from the bloody field.
Borne on his battered shield.
By foes o'ercome;—
But from a sterner fight,
In the defence of Eight,
Clothed with a conqueror's might.
We hail him home.

"His life in labours spent,
That 'Old man eloquent’
Now rests for aye;—
His dust the tomb may claim;—
His spirit's quenchless flame,
His ’venerable name,'[1]
Pass not away."[2]

  1. Clarum et venerahile nomen.
  2. The above lines are from the pen of the Rev. John Pierpont.