Wednesday 5 June 2013

Collected Poetry of George Markham Tweddell - 1823 - 1903

George Markham Tweddell (1823 - 1903) born in Stokesley North Yorkshire, was a Polymath - a
George Markham Tweddell 1823-1903
Chartist / People's Historian / Printer / Publisher / Author / Poet and much more. You will find out much more about his fascinating life and work if you click the Tweddell Hub and the Tweddell History links above.

Tweddell's Poetry Hub
Much of Tweddell's  work remained hidden away in antiquarian shops and reference or university libraries until fairly recently. I worked alongside one of George Markham Tweddell's descendants - Paul Markham Tweddell to help him bring much of the knowledge and texts from the Tweddell family collection to a wider audience and for reappraisal of his poetry and life's works, much of which is still relevant to the world today.

Where as the Tweddell Hub contains material relating to his books, histories, magazines and much else, the Tweddell Poetry Hub provides links to the various blogs I've set up for the different aspects of Tweddell's poetry.

Paul showed me several manuscript books of  Tweddell's poetry, much of which was published at the time in numerous magazines and news papers world wide but which had never been brought together in one place before. Tweddell did publish his Masonic poems as a book but the rest remained to be collected and published. So in 2009 we set about bringing together his collected works, which can be downloaded as several PDF files, free by clicking on Full Collected Poems in the menu above or here http://georgemarkhamtweddell.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/collected-poems-of-george-markham.html

Paul Markham Tweddell who did so much work toward this.
The introduction to Tweddell's poetry that i wrote for the collection and which can be read by clicking the Intro to Tweddell's poetry above, gives starting points for a reappraisal of Tweddell's poetry now that we have, more or less, the full works - and Tweddell was obviously much more Ebenezer Elliot (the Poor Law Rhymer) and a host of his contemporaries wrote both radical and nature poem. We explored aspects of his work that were emblematic or used masonic symbolism and much more. Subject matter ranges from the political and historical issues of his day, to the personal and family, to Masonic and philosophical, to local history and places of his homeland - Cleveland / North Yorkshire to poems about life itself, much of it in sonnet form.
prolific than anyone previously thought. We have explored his links with radical poets like

To reflect this diversity and despite all of the poems being available in the Collected works PDF's, I've created some special on line collections around various themes, which are linked above in the menu. These are - 

  • Sonnets of Flowers and Trees. These sonnets from his days of walking the Cleveland hills are not only knowledgeable about plants but, following Wither, one of the best known emblem writers, contain emblems and masonic symbolism, and so work on more than one level. On the blog, the poems are illustrated.
  • One Hundred Masonic Poems (1887) This collection of didactic sonnets was published in his life time, written later in life as his health was deteriorating but they reflect his sincere faith in the principles of Masonry, in the days when many of the radical movers and shakers were Freemasons. Tweddell was always open about his membership of the craft and advocated high standards of integrity, reflected in so many of these poems.
  • Cleveland (UK) Poems Tweddell was born and raised in Cleveland (North Yorkshire). His love of its moors and hills, towns, villages and industries, movers and shakers, poets and authors are reflected  in these poems which I've brought together in one place, in the hope that it will make an interesting collection and be of use to local historians and researchers. They are often illustrated along with additional material.
  • Florence Cleveland This was Tweddell's wife - Elizabeth Tweddell, who forged a lasting reputation as a poet and writers in her own right. Both the Tweddell's were concerned about the dying out of the Cleveland and other local dialects and Elizabeth - writing as Florence Cleveland - wrote and published a collection of poems and stories called Rhymes and Sketches to Illustrate the Cleveland dialect. This book can be viewed and downloaded from the Florence Cleveland link above. Her reputation is still good today and recently the popular young folk duo from Stockton on Tees - Megson - set her her humourous dialect poem Take Thy Self a Wife to music and even named their first album after the poem. There is also a link to more of her work on the Tweddell hub.
  • Poets, Politics, History and Life - A further volume of Tweddell's poetry was found by a member of the Tweddell family, which now forms part of the Tweddell poetry Collection. In this volume Tweddell's poetry contains more far reaching subject matter, from poems on the poets of the time, Wordsworth, Southey etc, to commentaries on European politics, history, religions and philosophy and indeed on life itself. It also includes some of his early poems, full of angst and in support of the likes of John Frost, the Chartist leader, sentenced to decapitation for advocating the People's Charter. These interesting collections will be posted below on this blog.
From Yorkshire Poets Past and Present Vol. II, No. 5, ed. Dr Forshaw (Bradford
1889
), pp. 70-71]
"Mr Tweddell can justly lay claim to being one of he most prolific writers that
our dear old Yorkshire has produced. As Editor, Public speaker, Lecturer,
Prose-writer and Poet he has won golden honors. To merely give and list his
publications would fill a goodly sized pamphlet. [Here follows a summary!]
Mr Tweddell was born at Garden House, near to Stokesley, on 20th of March,
1823. He is a Fellow of a large number of learned, scientific and antiquarian
societies
."

Here is Megson with one of Florence Cleveland's poems - Take Thyself a Wife.


Bro. General Garibaldi.

Bro. General Garibaldi. [No. 100]


A Hero of the highest type was he!
No Mason ever loved his Country more;
And Doomsday will appear to men before
Again thy see his equal. Liberty
Ne’er had a purer, bolder, wiser Son: 5
No greed of Gold, or Power, or Rank, had he,
But urgent wish to serve Humanity,—
And love from every Patriot he has won.
Hated alone by those who wish’d to enslave
The Minds and Bodies of their Fellow Men, 10
Our Brother’s Name will, to the future Pen
Of Poet or Historian, be brave
And spotless one: and they will him proclaim
As worthy o’er the World of Everlasting Fame!

George Markham Tweddell



"Giuseppe Garibaldi (July 4, 1807 – June 2, 1882) was an Italian general and politician. He is considered, with Camillo Cavour,Victor Emmanuel II and Giuseppe Mazzini, as one of Italy's "fathers of the fatherland".

Garibaldi was a central figure in the Italian Risorgimento, since he personally commanded and fought in many military campaigns that led eventually to the formation of a unified Italy. He generally tried to act on behalf of a legitimate power, which does not make him exactly a revolutionary: for example, he was appointed general by the provisional government of Milan in 1848, General of the Roman Republic in 1849 by the Minister of War, and led the Expedition of the Thousand on behalf and with the consent of Victor Emmanuel II.

He has been called the "Hero of Two Worlds" because of his military enterprises in Brazil, Uruguay and Europe. These earned him a considerable reputation in Italy and abroad, aided by exceptional international media coverage at the time. Many of the greatest intellectuals of his time, such as Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, and George Sand showered him with admiration. The United Kingdom and the United States helped him a great deal, offering him financial and military support in difficult circumstances....................

Tyneside
Commonwealth arrived on 21 March 1854. Garibaldi, already a popular figure on Tyneside, was welcomed enthusiastically by local workingmen, although the Newcastle Courant reported that he refused an invitation to dine with dignitaries in the city. He stayed in Tynemouth on Tyneside for over a month, departing at the end of April 1854. During his stay, he was presented with an inscribed sword, which his grandson later carried as a volunteer in British service in the Boer War. He then sailed to Genoa, where his five years of exile ended on 10 May 1854."

Tuesday 4 June 2013

The Earth-worm (with a letter from Lajos Kossuth (1802-1894), Hungarian statesman

While this may seem to be one of  Tweddell's nature poems, note the letter from Lajos_Kossuth (Father of Hungarian Democracy, Hungarian Statesman, Freedom Fighter, 1848–1849".)

The Earth-worm.
I
Scorn not the Earth-worm, nor e’er deem it vile:
Harmless as useful it has ever been
In e’vry land; for it has help’d, I ween,
To form the soil which it has loved to pile
O’er barren wastes, till the green grass has grown 5
Where all before was bare. Where now the corn
On meadow waves in beauty—trees adorn
The landscape—yea, wherever seed is sown
By man or bird—the Earth-worm has been there
Before them, to prepare for them the soil. 10
But for the Earth-worm, vain had been the toil
Of all our husbandry; for everywhere
It has been Earth’s first cultivation: we
Owe e’en the food we eat to its great industry.
II
Great is the lesson that we all should learn 15
From lowly Earth-worms! Let us not despise
The wisdom which throughout creation lies
For all to study. E’vry mind should burn
With warmest love of Nature’s noble laws:
And if mere Worms can play so great a part
In her economy, then, Man, thou art,
However humble, call’d to aid the cause
Of Progress, and no longer can maintain
That thou art Powerless.* Ev’ry effort made
In a good cause is potent, it will aid 25
The work which needeth ev’ry hand and brain
To bring it to completion. Let the Worm
Teach us to labour on alike in calm and storms.

George Markham Tweddell

 Louis Kossuth
* This great truth is so beautifully illustrated in a Letter which I had the honour to receive from the
illustrious patriot, Louis Kossuth, in 1855, that I am sure the reader will be glad of the extract:
Thanks for the warm interest you take in the cause of the down-trodden nations. You are quite right
in saying that every man has some influence in the world,— were that all men were penetrated by
that conviction; and would take it for an incitement to do as much as they can; many an evil would
be prevented by it. There is nothing more serviceable to the success of evil-doers that the common
error of many a well-disposed man, that he who cannot do much is justified in not doing anything.
Men should go to school to the ant, or listen to the lesson taught by the falling drop.— Yours
affectionately, Kossuth[§]
pp. 7 & 8 [Sonnets on Birds, Insect, etc]
Leeds Mercury Weekly Supplement, April 12/84. The Freemason, Sydney, New South Wales, April
11th, 1887. Northern Weekly Gazette, September 4th, !897.
[§ Lajos Kossuth (1802-1894), the Hungarian statesman, orator, and the foremost leader of the
Hungarian Revolution of 1848-49.]
..........................................

From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lajos_Kossuth Read more on this site
Extracts..
"Louis Kossuth; Ľudovít Košút in Slovak; 19 September 1802 – 20 March 1894) was a Hungarian lawyer, journalist, politician and Regent-President of the Kingdom of Hungary during the revolution of 1848–49. He was widely honored during his lifetime, including in the United Kingdom and the United States, as a freedom fighter and bellwether of democracy in Europe. Kossuth's bronze bust can be found in the United States Capitolwith the inscription: "Father of Hungarian Democracy, Hungarian Statesman, Freedom Fighter, 1848–1849".

In England around 1851 he .....He went thereafter to Winchester, Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham; at Birmingham the crowd that gathered to see him ride under the triumphal arches erected for his visit was described, even by his severest critics, as 75,000 individuals...

Back in London he addressed the Trades Unions at Copenhagen Fields in Islington. Some twelve thousand 'respectable artisans' formed a parade at Russell Square and marched out to meet him. At the Fields themselves, the crowd was enormous; the Times estimated it conservatively at 25,000, while the Morning Chronicle described it as 50,000, and the demonstrators themselves 100,000."

Monday 27 May 2013

The Druids’ Last Sacrifice

The Druids’ Last Sacrifice

The ancient Druids offer’d to their gods
A human sacrifice, and criminals
On their stone altars bled beneath the knife
The priestly arm upraised, rudely to plunge
Into an erring brother’s living heart, 5
Or else, in osier cages first confined,
Expired in flames lit by some priestly hand:
And we, whose scaffolds oft have reek’d with gore
Of earth’s best benefactors; we, whose cells
Have prison’d up the patriot and divine; 10
And who still struggle with the hangman’s rope
To teach the sanctity of human life;
And ever study how to cheat in trade
Or kill in war with most proficiency,
Self-righteous hypocrites who deceive 15
Ourselves and one another; we despise
The Druid for his paganism, meanwhile
We worship Gold as though it were a god,
And call ourselves good Christians.

George Markham Tweddell - writing as as Peter Proletarius
[From Tweddell’s People’s History of Cleveland, vol. 4, p. 96.
Middlesbrough Miscellany, No. 9. Northern Echo, Aug. 25/91. Also on:

http://megalithicpoems.blogspot.co.uk/2007/04/ancient-druids.html

And Julian Cope's blog http://www.headheritage.co.uk/headtohead/tma/topic/23046/flat/500
Cooper’s Journal
p. 263

Fitzcoraldo wrote on the entry on Julian Cope's Head to Head forum c 2009 -

Tweddell also wrote;

“Scoff not at antiquarian research,
As useless in results; for it throws light
Upon the darkness of the past to aid
Humanity along its devious way”

While commentator Littlestone offered a modern comparison of Tweddell's poem written in the 19thC.
"Or kill in war with most proficiency,
Self-righteous hypocrites who but deceive
Ourselves and one another; we despise
The Druid for his paganism, meanwhile
We worship Gold as though it were a god,
And call ourselves good Christians" Excerpt from Tweddell

"Old Proletarius seems to have been quite the socialist - and a Freemason to boot. Couldn't help thinking how little has changed since his day and how well his words fit present politics. Slight reworking of the above for Bush, Blare and their politics in the Middle East - hope Old Proletarius would approve ;-)

"Or kill in war with most proficiency,
Self-righteous hypocrites who but deceive
Ourselves and one another; we despise
The Muslim for his terrorism, meanwhile
We worship Oil as though it were a god,
And call ourselves good Christians." 
Littlestone's update on the Tweddell poem

Sonnet Written in York Castle

Sonnet Written in York Castle
During an arbitrary Incarceration of Forty Days, in the autumn of
1846 for “Contempt of Court”









Think not, because a prison’s massive wall
Deprives my body of its liberty,
That stones, and locks, and iron bars call thrall
The scaring mind, which, mounting over all,
Can freely roam o’er each declivity, 5
And mountain-steep through groves, o’er verdant plains,
Visiting scenes of pleasures past or pains;
For tyrants ne’er can keep the soul in chains.
The heart that’s nobly learn’d to soar above
Mere worldly wealth, and rank, and lawless power, 10
Of human life,—the heart that in its love
And all the sensual play-things of the hour
Can comprehend the meanest things that crawls,
Defies all terror of your castle-walls!

George Markham Tweddell
[To be found in the Special Collection, Brotherton library,
Leeds University and included here with kind permission.]

http://www.yorkcastleprison.org.uk/york-castle-prison.html

Lok (Loki)

Lok


Loki and Sigyn (1863) by Mårten Eskil Winge
Lok, Scandinavia’s devil,
For evermore is dead:
Knowledge is the champion
Beneath whose spear he bled;
And each vile thing of days of yore 5
Shall rot and welter in Lok’s gore.

George Markham Tweddell
[Tweddell’s Middlesbrough Miscellany, p. 60. Yorkshire
Poets past and present Vol. II, No. 5, ed. Dr Forshaw
(Bradford 1889), p. 69]





"In Norse mythology, Loki, Loptr, or Hveðrungr is a god or jötunn (or both). Loki is the son of Fárbauti and
Laufey, and the brother of Helblindi and Býleistr. By the jötunn Angrboða, Loki is the father of Hel, the wolf Fenrir, and the world serpent Jörmungandr. By his wife Sigyn, Loki is the father of Narfi and/or Nari. And by the stallion Svaðilfari, Loki is the mother—giving birth in the form of a mare—to the eight-legged horse Sleipnir. In addition, Loki is referred to as the father of Váli in the Prose Edda." More here on Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loki

Saturday 25 May 2013

On the Death of Mark Philips, Esq.

North of England Tractates No. 15, (1874)
In memoriam of the Death of  Mark Philips, Esq.
A Blank Verse Poem
Born November 4th, 1800, at The Park, Prestwick; Member of Parliament for
Manchester from December 13th, 1832, to July 23rd, 1847; High pheriff of
Warwickshire in 1851; Died at Welcombe House, Stratford-on-Avon, December
23rd, 1873, Æ 73; interred beneath the chancel of Snitterfield Church, January
2nd, 1874.
“The decease of MARK PHILIPS, of Snitterfield, has brought forth respect from all
parts of the United Kingdom. The following eloquent tribute is from the pen of
MR. GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL, the author of Shakspear, his Times and
Contemporaries,—who was guest of MR. PHILIPS during the past summer. MR.
TWEDDELL has kindly asked us to insert it, and to this request we gladly
accede.”—The Royal Leamington Spa Courier, January 3rd, 1874.

A merchant and manufacturer in Manchester, Philips was a supporter of Social Reform.
On the Death of Mark Philips, Esq.

Ask not why I am sad this Christmas-tide,
When other hearts are gay; why the tears start
Into mine eyes, like streams that burst their bounds;
For stretch’d upon his bier a friend is laid,
Who, in the love of his large heart, had room 5
For a poor bard like me.
My friends are few,—
So few, that losing one makes a dread void
Not easy to be fill’d. That “Friendship form’d
With moderation, for the human race
Are most expedient, and not such as to pierce 10
The marrow of their souls: with the same ease
As they the sacred cords entwine, they ought
To slacken them at will,” was glibly said,
In ancient Greece, long, long ago, but one* 15
Who could not do it; for the human heart,
(Using that term to designate thereby
The seat of feeling, though it be the brain,)
Can form a friendship that will never die,
From bloom, unwither’d through eternity. 20
And such, I ween, was ours.
Death at all times,
And under every circumstances we know,
Is solemn: whether in the poor man’s cot
Or rich man’s mansion he may whet his scythe;
Whether he cutteth down the infant grass 25
Before it well has flower’d, or reaps the grain
That hangs its ripen’d head ready for harvest;

Solemn is Death, whate’er the time or place;
And hearts while they are human feel the pang
Of parting from the friend whom they have loved. 30
Hence—thou devoutly I do thank my God,†
(With whom do live the spirits of all of those
Departed in the Lord—with Whom the souls
Of all the faithful, after they are freed
From fleshly burdens, in felicity 35
Unknown to earthly wayfarers, enjoy
The rich reward of lives well-spent on earth.
That it has pleased Him to deliver us from
The miseries of this our sinful world,
My dear old friend—yet I were less than man 40
If I could part from him without a tear.
I know the gain is his, the loss is ours;
And I would not recall again to life
That worn-out body if I had the power.
The heart that now has ceased to beat, 45
When last I saw him, pump’d with too much power.
Ten million times it has forced the crimson tide
Through the remotest alleys of that frame
Which low lies colder that the marble bust
In his own hall: for Death soon levels down 50
Peasant and prince alike into the grave.
Then happiest they who in their souls possess
Treasures which Death can never take away.
My friend was not a fool when flattery pleased
When in the flesh, frail though all flesh may be; 55
Nor must his disembodied spirit now
Look down on fulsome funeral elegy,
All full of falsehood as it lacks in feeling.
No, honest MARK! There needeth not for thee
That we should rack invention how to say 60
Or sing fine things we mean not in thy praise.
Before I met thee, one whose soul is truth
Had told me how he wish’d I saw his face,
For ’t was so manly that it did one good
To look upon it: hence I was prepared 65
To see that honest open countenance
Which the dark tomb will hide now from my view.
But little could I dream that one so far
Removed above me by those social bars
Which separate too much on honest man

From his dear brother—honest too, though poor—
Should be kick’d by, as rather poles i’ the way
Of an advancing giant. So oft thy guest,
Truth prompts me to bear witness I ne’er met
A man more humble in those walks of life 75
Where weekly wages recompense the toil
Of lowliest labour. Practical
As I am dreamy, how such opposites
Delighted in each other, I wot not,—
Save that both loved the true and hated shams 80
That came forth cloked to prey the unwary‡
And, as we’ve stroll’d together o’er the grounds
Where SHAKSPERE oft had rambled—with delight
Have view’d the landscape circling Stratford round,
And traced the gentle Avon’s winding stream, 85
Calling up all their histories—I have faith
To fancy that we both may meet again,
In place e’en pleasanter than our loved Welcombe,
Where we shall part no more: and ’mong the good
And gifted we shall meet. Great SHAKSPERE’s shade 90
Will give us welcome there.
Rest then, O rest!
(I cannot say “perturbed spirit,” as
The Princely Dane did to his father’s ghost,)
For after life so well-spent, rest is there,
Or we believe in vain! In parliament 95
For fifteen years thou gave thy best of life,—
Not always with unfailing blest,
For thou wert human; but though labour’d well
For sacred rights of conscience. For just laws
’Tween man and man, and all thou thought would lend 100
To England’s greatness. And well were it, I ween,
If all our merchant-princes and the sons
Of Commerce kept their souls as pure as thine.
And thou, too, didst then Alms, without the sound
Of trumpet blaring forth the holy deed; 105
And some have broke thy bread who never knew
Whose bounteous hand it was their wants supplied.
But more thou loved to see the honest hands
Of useful industry win their own bread
By their own labour; and, from early life, 110
Fought for the freedom of the country’s trade,
Until we conquer’d.

Husbandry in thee,
When Cincinnatus-like thou sought to plough,
Found a good patron; and thy cottagers
Loved thee when living, and will now deplore 115
With me the loss of a warm-hearted friend.
Full well I know their feelings; more than once
Together we have met them; but no more
Shall we address them at the social board,
Thy tongue is silent now for them and me; 120
But thy example, like the words thou spoke,
Being manly, truthful, wise, and eloquent,
Will speak to us through life, although thy face
With genial smile no more will beam upon us.
Rest then, dear friend, after thy well-spent years; 125
For thou hast labour’d hard from early life,
And died in harness. Idleness ne’er seized
Upon thee. And temperate too wert thou
In thought and action. Calm as thou wert strong,
Ambition could lure thee with her wiles; 130
And when heredity honours were
Proffer’d unto thy good old sire§ and thee
Ye both the glitt’ring bauble could reject,
Which weaker minds would sell their souls to gain.
Honour enough for thee to represent 135
The first commercial city of the world,
Free-chosen by its people, and unsway’d
By smiles or frowns from what thou deem’d to right,
Men like thee help to make England’s greatness,
Not as mere money-bags, but men with souls 140
Worthy to live beyond the grave.
Dear friend, for a brief space!—Farewell for thou hast cross’d
In Charon’s boat a little time before us.
The Styx of Death is yet for us to pass,
But Christian light can brighten that dark stream, 145
And thy example nerve us for the voyage,—
Hoping to meet thee in that heavenly land
“Where the wicked cease from trembling, and
The weary are at rest.”

Stokesley - George Markham Tweddell


I think Tweddell would have met Mark Phillips while he was head of the Ragged School in Bury and visited Phillips when Tweddell visted Stratford. They both had involvement in the Anti Corn Lawe League and reform movements.

"The Manchester Guardian, a newspaper with a radical agenda, was established shortly afterwards. In 1832, following the Great Reform Act, Manchester elected its first MPs since the election of 1656. Five candidates, including William Cobbett stood and Liberals Charles Poulett Thomson and Mark Philips were elected. The Great Reform Act led to conditions favourable to municipal incorporation. Manchester became a Municipal Borough in 1837, and what remained of the manorial rights were later purchased by the town council." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Manchester

Further info on Mark Phillips
Also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Philips_(politician)

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/PRphilipsM.htm

http://www.thewelcombehills.co.uk/?page_id=101

http://cross-street-chapel.org.uk/index.php?page=before-the-welfare-state

Notes by GMT / Paul Tweddell

NOTES
*EURIPIDES, the great Greek dramatist, put these words into the mouth of the
Nurse, in his tragedy of Hippolytus,—more than two thousand three hundred
years ago.
† This passage is designed as a paraphrase of a beautiful part of the Church
Burial Service.
‡ “The wise-hearted, as well as wise-headed man, knew mankind, and was
my friend: this is my only answer to such as are not.” The Confessions of
JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU.
§ The late ROBERT PHILIPS, of The Park, Prestwich, Esq., one of the
merchant-princes of Manchester, “who dared be honest in the worst of
times,” was born April 3rd 1760, and descended from the ancient race of
Staffordshire squires,—one of whom first introduced the manufacture of
Tape into this country from Holland, to employ the poor people of his parish
during the Winter months; for benevolence has long run in the blood of the
Philipses. Having glutted the home market for miles around his manors of
Upper Teyne, Nether Teyne, and Checkley, he was under necessity either to
discontinuing that mode of employing those poor people whom he had
always deemed it his duty to see provided for, or to open out fresh markets
for their wares. Though he had never sought any pecuniary profit from his
laudable undertaking, he was exceeding loath to give it up, and thus throw his
little community out of employment: he therefore prevailed on one of his
sons to go to Manchester, and open a warehouse for the more extensive sale
of Philipses Tape. In order to make the warehouse self-supporting, and the
thing grew, by God’s blessing on the good judgement and strict integrity with
which it was conducted; and the Philipses Warehouse is to this day one of the
widest known and most prosperous of the institutions of Manchester. “And so
you see, TWEDDELL,” said the subject of this poem, as he narrated the brief
history to me over a cigar after dinner, one of my pleasant visits to him at his
hospitable seat in Snitterfield Park, “in endeavouring to do good to the people
of his parish, he was laying the foundation of the future prosperity of his own
family, without ever expecting to do so!” Verily, the Chronicles of
Commerce—if faithfully and fully written—would be more interesting than
those of War.
ROBERT PHILIPS walked worthily in the footsteps of his fathers. Upright and
charitable in all the transactions of life—though often pelted in the streets of
Manchester for his peaceable adherence to Constitutional Reform, and
regarded as little less than a traitor by sundry purblind politicians of that
period because he was wise enough to oppose the infamous war which
deservedly lost us our fine American Colonies—he was most dearly loved by
those who knew him best. He married, August 2nd 1798, ANNIE the daughter
of MATTHEW NEEDHAM, of Nottingham, Esq.; and it was from her motherly
teaching at the Park that my friend derived that intense love of flowers and
rural life, which never forsook him to the last. On the passing of the Reform
Bill, the government offered ROBERT PHILIPS a Baronetcy which was
exemplified in constant practice rather than in noisy profession, he died in
March 1844, and was buried on the 20th of that month at the Unitarian Chapel
at Stand,—nearly midway between Manchester and Bury, the important
places for which his sons have had the high honour to sit in Parliament,
without soliciting the vote of a single elector.



Lines to Tyrants (For Chartist leader John Frost)

Lines to Tyrants.
The following lines were written when Mr. Frost[1] was under

sentence of Decapitation, and were occasioned by receiving
intelligence of his brutal sentence.

Tyrants avaunt! Be not too hasty,
The blood of gen’rous Frost to shed:
O pause before you commit murder,
Think not your idle threats we dread.
We know that you have got sufficient 5
Impudence for the deed of blood,
We know too that your hearts are callous
To ev’ry feeling truly good;
But think not because you are vicious,
That we will calmly bear the wrong, 10
Which you’re resolve’d to heap upon us,—
Robb’d of the rights which us belong
Think not because taxation robbs[2] us
Of most the wages that we earn;
Think not because tyrants oppress us 15
And cause the nation sore to mourn,
That we will ever cease demanding,
The rights that are to us most dear:
The justice of the “People’s Charter”
Does Frost e’en in his dungeon cheer. 20
Though Vincent in his cell be groaning,
Beneath injustice’s cruel sway;
Think not he will forsake our Charter,
Nor unto tyranny give way.
Tyrants may meanly wish to [thwart[3]] us 25
From striving freedom to regain,
But they as soon might still the motion
Of yonder angry foaming main.
Do they suppose we’re so far fallen,
As not to know what is our due? 30
If they think so they are mistaken,
We are resolved to have it too.
To have our rights we are resolved
Whate’er the pain, whate’er the cost:
Our children never of us shall say, 35
Through our neglect their rights were lost.
No Frost thy body they ill ne’er quarter,
Brittons[2] can never see it done:
Thy liberation we’ll procure;
Unto thy home thou shalt return. 40
Thy wife and daughters they are pining,
With grief at what thou’rt doom’d to bear;

But thanks unto the God of freedom,
Their bloody threats though dost not fear.
O’Connor too they next will pounce on; 45
He too they’ve marked for their prey:
They think if they can crush our leaders,
Tyranny then may have full sway,
Be not deceiv’d short-sighted tyrants!
The pits you dig for freedom’s fall, 50
Will swallow up your own vile system.
Slav’ry and tyrants one and all.
Those means you take to crush our freedom,
Will make it progress faster still;
Like a poor jaded horse when drawing 55
A heavy load up yonder hill.
Perchance his driver comes behind him,
(Tyrants in him your picture see!)
And for to make him draw his burden,
The poor horse plods dreadfully, 60
(For hordes love their liberty,)
Puts to all strength that he possesses,
For to escape his tyranny.
So we the hill of freedom climbing,
When goaded by tyrannic pow’r, 65
Bring all our dormant courage forward,
And gain our liberties that hour.
Thanks to you tyrants for your curses;
For your oppression thanks again:
The means you take to crush our Charter, 70
Those means will us the Charter gain.
Stokesley ‘A Christian Republican’

George Markham Tweddell
[A lose sheet inserted in Rhymes in M/S]

[1]
John Frost (1784- 1877) a Newport (Monmouthshire) tailor
was a prominent member of the direct action (‘The Physical
Chartists’) branch of the Chartist movement. He led a mob of
3,000 fellow chartists in Newport to free a number of
imprisoned fellow members. In the fracas Frost was arrested,
found guilty of treason and sentenced to being hanged and
quartered. Later this was commuted to transportation for life to
Australia, where he stayed until 1856. Henry Vincent (1813-
1878) and Feargus O'Connor (c.1796–1855), mentioned later in
the poem, were colleagues of Frost, the former being involved
in the Newport riots, the latter a wealthy Irishman and the most
prominent Chartist of his age.
[2] sic
[3] Damage to the paper makes this word difficult to decipher
reliably.

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/CHfrost.htm

Chartism-New-History-Malcolm-Chase
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Chartism-New-History-Malcolm-Chase/dp/0719060877/ref=sr_1_1/026-8815493-9662854?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1192207241&sr=1-1

A Model Female

A Model Female.[1]

Look on you lovely woman! Truly she
Deserves the reverence to goodness due;
For she is no gay butterfly, but true
To all that elevates humanity;
And much intelligence behind that brow 5
Dwells in her brain; and none will e’er receive
Unkindness from her, or have cause to grieve
That they put trust in her: all that is low
In thought or action she does e’er despise,
All that is good in her life’s web doth weave; 10
Her simplest word one always may believe
More than most oaths, which oft are arrant lies.
It is not merely a fine form or force
Fits women to be wives and mothers of their race.

George Markham Tweddell
[Rhymes in M/S, notional p. 75]
[[1] The original tile is ‘A Female Model’.]

A True Woman.
A graceful form, and face that ne’er deceives
Any who gaze upon its cheerful glow;
So light her footstep that it scarcely leaves
Its impress on the newly-fallen snow.
Her’s is a finely, cultivated mind, 5
From every vulgar prejudice most free;
And we may travel far and wide to find
A model of such perfect purity.
She has no lack of female gentleness,
But for all suffering has been sympathy; 10
Her strongest wish is human kind to bless,
And make our Earth a Paradise to be,
I long no holier angel e’er to see,
Either in this life or through all eternity.

George Markham Tweddell
[Rhymes in M/S, notional p. 81]
......................
From Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Wollstonecraft"Mary Wollstonecraft states that currently many women are silly and superficial (she refers to them, for example, as "spaniels" and "toys", but argues that this is not because of an innate deficiency of mind but rather because men have denied them access to education. Wollstonecraft is intent on illustrating the limitations that women's deficient educations have placed on them; she writes: "Taught from their infancy that beauty is woman's sceptre, the mind shapes itself to the body, and, roaming round its gilt cage, only seeks to adorn its prison." She implies that, without the encouragement young women receive from an early age to focus their attention on beauty and outward accomplishments, women could achieve much more."

The Battle of Tewkesbury.

The Battle of Tewkesbury.

Fought May 4th, 1471
More for than hundred years have pass’d away
Since English fools did English fools oppose,
In deadly feud, for Lancaster’s Red Rose,
Or the White Rose of York. That shameful day
Saw men of the same kindred glad to slay 5
Each other, both alone as there they stood
In the array of battle; in cool blood
They were no better. Though around them lay
Their slaughter’d thousands, Edward, Clarence, Grey,
Gloster, and Hastings—men of rank most high— 10
Delighted in such horrid cruelty
As murdering the Prince after the fray,
Their youthful prisoner. O, from them may
Mankind mark well now and learn to shun such wickedness for aye.

George Markham Tweddell
[Rhymes in M/S, notional p. 66]

From Wiki
"The Battle of Tewkesbury, which took place on 4 May 1471, was one of the decisive battles of the Wars of the Roses. The forces loyal to the House of Lancaster were completely defeated by those of the rival House of York under their monarch, King Edward IV. The Lancastrian heir to the throne, Edward, Prince of Wales, and many prominent Lancastrian nobles were killed during the battle or were dragged from sanctuary two days later and immediately executed. The Lancastrian King, Henry VI, who was a prisoner in the Tower of London, died or was murdered shortly after the battle. Tewkesbury restored political stability to England until the death of Edward IV in 1483." More here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Tewkesbury

Friday 24 May 2013

William the Conqueror

William the Conqueror.

(Born in 1027; Died September 9th, 1087)
A clever man and brave, with resolution
Well worthy of a king: yet I can raise
Only for him one single note of praise,—
’T is that he loved his Mother. Prosecution
Of mad ambition never made him feel 5
Ashamed of her, the honest Tanner’s daughter!
He wasted England, brutally did slaughter
Our Anglo-Saxon ancestors, and steel’d
His heart to all their direful suffering.
Murderers and robbers were they at the best, 10
Those Norman nobles: most vilely they oppress’d
Those who had never wrong’d them. To become the king
Of England, will his brother-thieves he bribed,
And on the plunder long our aristocracy thrived.

George Markham Tweddell
[Rhymes in M/S, notional p. 61]

Wat Tyler.














Wat Tyler.
I.
That was stalwart stroke Wat Tyler struck
Upon the brutal tax-collector’s head,
Who had to Brentford town been cause of dread:
Had every tool of tyranny such luck,
’T would be a blessing to the human race. 5
There was one villain less when he fell dead,
And the poor Serfs who for their tyrants bled
In many a useless battle, rose apace
To fight for their own rights. True, much excess
Attended their uprising. Such is sure 10
With all who long oppression may endure;
For Liberty alone can people bless
With peace, security, regard for law,
And all the blessings which the world e’en saw.
II.












Rough though their mode, our Serfs for freedom fought; 15
And brute violence they used no more
Than those who then an iron sceptre bore
To smite their fellows who mere justice sought.
Hate begets Hate, and they who first did wrong
Were guilty of the bloodshed that ensures. 20
We live in happier days; what the Serfs sued
For then, has long been won, though slavish song
Has sung the tyrants with vile lying praise;
And few have dared the victims to affront
Of sympathy or justice one true word. 25
The time has surely come when we should raise
Our voices for the truth, and now proclaim
Richard and Walworth names of everlasting shame.

George Markham Tweddell
[Rhymes in M/S, notional p. 54-55]

Read more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wat_Tyler

Address to Britons.

Address to Britons.

Britons! Who have felt the flame,
Which in all ages burns the same,
In bosoms tyrants ne’er can tame,
Nor subject to their wills!
To you my muse doth now appeal, 5
Who’ve in your breasts a heart to feel
When tyrants do the common weal
Perplex with various ills.
Who’s he will shrink from freedom’s cause
When tyrants do it sore oppose, 10
Contaminating all our laws
With hateful villany?
The wretch who a willing slave,
Unworthy is e’en of a grave,
Within the land he will not save 15
From hateful tyranny.
But those who battle for our right,
In freedom’s oft unequal fight,
Their history fills us with delight,
Till number’d with the dead. 20
But let us do what good we can
To our oppressed fellow man,
For life it is but a short span,
Then let us use it well.
And what can we much better do, 25
Than raise up those who’re sunken low,
With much oppression and with woe,
Which makes this earth a hell.
Then let us raise the cheering cry,
Reverberating to the sky, 30
The funeral dirge of slavery,
Most hallowed freedom’s name.

Curse me the man who loves to rule
Above his brother: also the fool
Who meanly will become the tool 35
Of tyrants, curse the same.
But bless and cheer where’er he goes,
The man who will become the tool
Which tyranny upon its foes
Doth always strive to lay.

Then let us like brave Emmett die,
Or Vincent-like in prison lie,
But ne’er succumb to tyranny,
Let come whatever may.

Thou, Liberty, shalt never die! 45
Thy “lion-heart and eagle-eye”
Will live for eternity,
When tyranny is o’er.

George Markham Tweddell
Stokesley ‘Georgius’
[Stokesley News and Cleveland Reporter No. 20, p. 171]

Tweddell mentions two Chartists in this poem -

Henry Vincent (10 May 1813 – 29 December 1878) was active in the formation of early Working Men's Associations in Britain, a popular Chartist leader, brilliant and gifted public orator, prospective but ultimately unsuccessful Victorian MP, and later an anti-slavery campaigner. Read more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Vincent





Robert Emmett - Chartist

"Robert Emmet (4 March 1778 – 20 September 1803) was an Irish nationalist and Republican, orator and
rebel leader. He led an abortive rebellion against British rule in 1803 and was captured, tried and executed for high treason.

Robert Emmet came from a wealthy Protestant family who sympathised with Irish Catholics, namely their lack of fair representation in Parliament. The Emmet family also sympathised with the American Revolution. From a very early age Robert Emmet’s political and social aspirations views were defined. As an orator, some of his last words were made in a speech on the eve of his execution" Read more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Emmet

Address to Tomaso Aniello Commonly Called Masaniello

Address to Tomaso Aniello
Commonly Called Masaniello


Imagined to have been delivered by him
at the Revolt of Naples in 1647

Awake! Arise my country’s sons,
Gird on your swords for fight;
For victory or death must soon,
Upon each bosom light
Too long a hateful tyrant crew 5
Have held you all in thrall:
Awake! Arise my country’s sons,
Rouse up both one and all.
So, will you longer thus submit
To lead the life of slaves? 10
Far better let the battle field
Become each of your graves.

For those who die in freedom’s cause,
In heav’n will find a home;
Where tyrants and base parasites 15
Can never hope to come.
Say, shall the Neapolitan
Crouch to the Spanish yoke?
Or shall each link of slav’ry’s chain
Asunder now be broke? 20
Though cowards may stand trembling,
And priests may cry “obey,”
God, nature, and our reason,
All three doth answer NAY!
Man ne’er was form’d for bondage, 25
Nor born to be a slave;
He should be free as his thoughts—
Chainless as ocean’s waves!
Yes, as the winds that o’er us sweep
Refuse to be restrained 30
So should mankind spurn slav’ry’s yoke,
Nor be by tyrants chain’d.
Fair freedom is the gift of God,
By him to mortals giv’n:
Then shall so fair, so good a gift, 35
From us be rudely riv’n?
No, no! brave Neapolitans,
We’ll sooner fight and die:
Behold your homes by Spaniards spoil’d,
Your children pine and die! 40
When parents, wives, and little ones,
Aloud for vengeance cry,
How can the sword keep in the sheath?
Draw, draw for liberty.
I, though only a poor fisherman, 45
Will freely lead you on;
I call on you for your support,
Till the good work be done.
Then shout aloud with all your might
Until it rend the sky, 50
“Freedom for Naples and her sons,
Death, death, or liberty!”

George Markham Tweddell
Stokesley ‘Georgius.’
[No. 12, 01.10.1843, p. 99]

"Masaniello (an abbreviation of Tommaso Aniello) (1622 – July 16, 1647) was an Italian fisherman, who became leader of the revolt against the rule of Habsburg Spain in Naples in 1647."

Read more about him here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masaniello





Superstition.

Superstition.

‘Tis Superstition nerves the bigots arm,
To plunge the glittering steel within the breast
Of those whose minds are cast in nobler mould;
Or, by fair science trained, do soar aloft,
To heights the bigot never can attain. 5
Unlike blind errors misled devotee,
The votary of Nature and of her God
Leaves Superstition’s dark and muddy pool,
To drink from knowledge’s clear and pearly fount,
And bathe in Freedom’s intellectual rays: 10
Leaving the fetters priestcraft would impose,
To those whose slavish souls boast of their chains,
And glory in the slavery they endure.
Yes! Superstition ever curses man;
Closes his ears against the shrieks and wails 15
Of those that suffer pain upon the rack,
Or groan midst fires by monkish hatred lit.
Know this, ye demons in the shape of men,
That for to torture those ye can’t convince
That your own dogmas only can be true,

Is never pleasing in the sight of God;
Whose essence being from pollution free,
Delights not in the woes of human kind,
Like those who to themselves do arrogate
The keeping of the oracles of God. 25
Inhuman wretches! ’tis in vain your fires
Do burn, more worthy mortals to consume.
Is not the victim suff’ring on the rack,
Your fellow-creature, countryman, and friend?
Your brother in all things but in cruelty? 30
His pains, his shrieks, your inhumanity,
And cruel exultation o’er his woes,
Will hasten on the tide of light and thought,
Which sweeping Persecution from the earth,
Bids Reason, Knowledge, Truth, and Virtue reign. 35

George Markham Tweddell
Stokesley using pen name ‘Georgius’ in Cleveland News and Stokesley Reporter c 1842 - 45
[No. 9, 01.07.1843, p. 71]

An African Slave

An African Slave.

“Oh! would that freedom were my lot,
How happy would I be;
Scenes of my childhood, ne’er forgot,
Soon would I visit ye.
“The chain that now hangs on my arm, 5
Badge of my hapless state,
I’d snap, although I might alarm
My tyrants by my fate.
“Around my father’s aged neck
I’d cling as when a boy; 10
My mother’s sorrow I would check,
And change her grief to joy.
“Those tiny brothers which I left,
When from my parents torn,
I of their company bereft, 15
A slave must mourn forlorn.
“My sisters too! how they will weep,
And grieve at my exile;
The thoughts of them disturb my sleep,
Till driven to my toil. 20
“But thou, my own dear loving one,
Whose heart was ever true,
That heart will now with grief be torn,
And mine is torn for you.
“Oft on the wide sea’s sandy shore 25
With thee I’ve wander’d there;
These scenes I ne’er shall visit more,
To breathe the lover’s prayer.”
So spoke the poor dejected slave,
Who on the crag-stone stood; 30
Seeing no rest but in the grave,
He plung’d into the flood.

Ye tyrant fiends! who dare usurp
Power o’er your fellow man.
You fill all earth with misery, 35
The grave you never can.
There ’tis your pow’r stops short,
You can no further go:
The tomb’s the last, but sure, retreat
From tyranny and woe. 40
Even kings must rot like common men,
And will return to clay;
And, cheek by jowl, tyrant and slave
Will by each other lay.
Ye conquerors! Whose iron heels 45
Doth bruise a people’s brow;
Your bloated forms e’er long will be,
Let him become your friend.
Sure man was form’d for nobler things
Than e’er to be a slave; 50
Or why should he, within his breast,
That noble spirit have?
Is ’t not enough that we do force
The brute for us to moil;
But must we fall upon mankind, 55
And bid them for us to toil?
Oh! when will thraldom flee our earth?
When will oppression cease?
When virtue in each heart doth dwell,
When knowledge doth increase; 60
Throwing their mantle o’er each soul,
In every land, from pole to pole.

George Markham Tweddell
Stokesley ‘Georgius’ (pen name for this poem in Tweddell's radical newspaper-  Stokesley and Cleveland Reporter c 1842 - 45
[No. 7, 01.05.1843, p. 52]
6

We think this early poem of Tweddell's may have been influenced by James Montgomery (1771-1854) who George admired - read his poetry here - http://www.poemhunter.com/i/ebooks/pdf/james_montgomery_2004_9.pdf
Montgomery, although a Scot, was a campaigning reformist especially against slavery, spending much of his life in Yorkshire and was imprisoned in 1795 and 1796. James Montgomery was a British editor, hymnwriter and poet. He was particularly associated with humanitarian causes such as the campaigns to abolish slavery and to end the exploitation of child chimney sweeps. Read More here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Montgomery


Here is Montgomery's poem -

A Cry from South Africa - by James Montgomery

Africa, from her remotest strand,
Lifts to high heaven one fetter'd hand,

And to the utmost of her chain
Stretches the other o'er the main:
Then, kneeling 'midst ten thousand slaves,
Utters a cry across the waves,
Of power to reach to either pole,
And pierce, like conscience, through the soul,
Though dreary, faint, and low the sound,
Like life-blood gurgling from a wound,
As if her heart, before it broke,
Had found a human tongue, and spoke.

"Britain! not now I ask of thee
Freedom, the right of bond and free;
Let Mammon hold, while Mammon can,
The bones and blood of living man;
Let tyrants scorn, while tyrants dare,
The shrieks and writhings of despair;
An end will come — it will not wait,
Bonds, yokes, and scourges have their date,
Slavery itself must pass away,
And be a tale of yesterday.

"But now I urge a dearer claim,
And urge it by a mightier name:
Hope of the world! on thee I call,
By the great Father of us all,
By the Redeemer of our race,
And by the Spirit of all grace;
Turn not, Britannia, from my plea;
— So help Thee GOD as Thou help'st me!
Mine outcast children come to light
From darkness, and go down in night;
— A night of more mysterious gloom
Than that which wrapt them in the womb:
Oh! that the womb had been the grave
Of every being born a slave!
Oh! that the grave itself might close
The slave's unutterable woes!
But what beyond that gulf may be,
What portion in eternity,
For those who live to curse their breath,
And die without a hope in death,
I know not, and I dare not think;
Yet, while I shudder o'er the brink
Of that unfathomable deep,
Where wrath lies chain'd and judgments sleep,
To thee, thou paradise of isles!
Where mercy in full glory smiles;
Eden of lands! o'er all the rest
By blessing others doubly blest,
— To thee I lift my weeping eye;
Send me the Gospel, or I die;
The word of CHRIST's salvation give,
That I may hear his voice and live."

Tuesday 21 May 2013

Benjamin Robert Haydon.


Benjamin Robert Haydon.

I
Haydon, thine was a truly noble soul!
B. R Haydon
The Painter’s Art, above all price to thee,
Was prized as gift to raise humanity.
No sordid love of gain could e’er control
Thy gifted pencil. All the beautiful 5
For thee had charms above or rank or gold;
Thy soul was truly loving, pure, and bold;
The world to highest merit blindly dull
That could not clearly its own interest see
To free thy mind from every worldly care. 10
Bravely thy battled; though at last Despair
One fatal moment o’ercame Industry,
Genius and Goodness: yet I content would be
To share thy cruel fate could I half-equal thee!


II
And yet, methinks, great weakness was in thee 15
In running into many a needless debt,
Causing thy soul unnecessary fret
When calm was needed. ’T was not Poverty,
But wild extravagance, which thy didst ape.
From these rich men who ask’d thee out to dine, 20
Which caused much misery to that mind of thine,
From which frugality had been escape.
Many great artists in less gains than those
Which thou wert favour’d with, have been content,
And thank’d great Goodness that so much was sent 25
To enable them on Painting to repose
Calmly for bread and fame. Yea, such as thou
Never unto Despair should for one moment bow.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 52 to line 19 and completed on p. 78 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
[*(1786-1846). English Romantic painter, teacher and writer.
In line 28 ‘false Pride’ is offered to ‘Despair’ as an alternative.]

The Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840 (1841) - Haydon


Haydon - Napoleon  Bonaparte 1830

William Wordsworth - Haydon




"Benjamin Robert Haydon ; 26 January 1786 – 22 June 1846) was an English painter, specialising in grand historical pictures, although he also painted a few contemporary subjects and, with some reluctance, portraits. His commercial success was damaged by his often tactless dealings with patrons, and by the enormous scale on which he preferred to work. He was troubled by financial problems throughout his life, which led to several periods of imprisonment for debt. He committed suicide in 1846.

He gave lectures on art, and kept extensive diaries, which were published after his death."
Read more on Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Haydon


Vagabonds.


Vagabonds.

Thou must not for one moment falsely think
The raggêd, unwash’d, and unkempt must be
The sterling friends of poor humanity;
Or they who drown their faculties in drink
Are fit to lead an arduous emprise. 5
Riches, ’t is true, are apt to lull the soul
In sensual pleasures; they too much control
All nations, so the peoples never rise
To the true height of manhood’s dignity.
The good, through suffering, learn to sympathise 10
With all who suffer; they are truly wise:
The vile are harden’d by adversity;
And should prosperity be ever theirs,
Will never seek to ease a fellow-mortal’s cares.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 51 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]

Anger


Anger

Anger is never evil in itself;
’T is only bad when it is misapplied;
For it is good when rous’d on Virtue’s side,
And Reason holds the reins; a wicked elf
When uncontroll’d—an angel should it take 5
The right direction. He whose soul ne’er felt
Indignant when the tongue of Slander dealt
Its poison on the pure—who for the sake
Of the oppress’d ne’er rais’d or hand or voice—
Who ne’er felt Anger for the injured weak— 10
For a mean coward has not far to seek,
And for a friend can never be my choice.
Give me the man who rouses at all wrong,
For he is worthy of the poet’s song.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 46 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
The Voice of Reason, Chicago, Feb., 1892.

An Aspiration.


An Aspiration.

If after death I should remember’d be,
And I might chuse my own bright meed of fame,
This were my wish—At mention of my name
The eyes of childhood should light up with glee;
The mother, when in a most loving mood, 5
Should teach her child through life to copy me.
I fain would be a soul so pure that she
Could think of no one better; just too proud
To do a dirty action—meek and true,
Despising worldly wealth and rank and power, 10
With love of nature only for my dower,
At peace with God and man; I would subdue
All evil deeds and words and thoughts, and prove,
By a devoted life, worthy of children’s love.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 45 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
Ulverston Mirror, Aug. 8/85. Cleveland News, Oct. 17, 1885. The
Freemason’s Repository, Providence, Rhode Island, U.S., Feb., 1886

True Patriotism.


True Patriotism.

Give me the man—be he or rich or poor—
Who seeks for Truth, and boldly speaks his mind;
Who will not stoop to flatter humankind
By doctrines trimm’d to pander to the hour:
Not wishful to offend, yet will not shrink 5
To point out Error whene’er Duty calls:
Who loves his country, and whate’er befals*
Holds it dishonour when we seek to link
Her interests with evil to our race.
Such are the noble and the truly wise: 10
No patriot he who ever can despise
The good in other nations. Let all embrace
In arms of love, utility, and grace,
And happiness will spread o’er all the world apace.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 44 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
The Democrat, London, January 3rd, 1885. Ulverston Mirror, Aug: 22/85.
Penrith Observer, Sept 1/85. Cleveland News, Sept. 26/85. Voice of
Masonry, Chicago, Feb., 1890.
* [sic]

“Capital Punishments.”


“Capital Punishments.”
I
To teach the sanctity of human life
By taking it, upon the barb’rous plea
Of “blood for blood,” shows small fidelity
To justice: such a course is but the strife
Of one wrong with another; for it is rife 5
With anger and revenge. We err who call
That “punishment” which leaves no room at all
For reformation. They who’d draw the knife
To harm their fellows, may be kept by fear
At times from using it; but none can dwell 10
Safely with those who only fear of hell,
Or strangling on the gallows, only here
Keeps from the crime of murder. Nor hate nor gain
Can tempt the good to play the part of Cain.


II
No tortures e’er inflicted on the vile 15
Will make them virtuous. We with care must train
All in the love of Good, or we in vain
May look for men and women free from guile
And brutal feelings. Those who never learn
To keep their passions under Reason’s rein, 20
Are sure to cause themselves and others pain:
The rightly train’d will ever seek to earn
That happiness which ever bless those
Who love and serve their Maker. To be good
Is to be happy: be it understood 25
God ever blesses all those that keep His laws.
Whilst crime exists, our prisons ought to be
Each in itself a true reformatory.

III
E’en as a mere machine, Man is too good,
If able-bodied—however vile he be 30
In all that constitutes humanity—
To be destroy’d. Our code was soak’d in blood
From end to end, till true Reformers rose
To cleanse it from injustice. We must seek
Ever to find protection for the meek 35
And peaceable, from violence of those
Who are the madden’d slaves of tyrant Sin.
No wrong is done in taking ev’ry care
The violent are kept in durance where
They cannot injure others; and within 40
Will guarded prisons, they should compensate,
Far as their labour could the injury done the State.

IV
If we regard this life as pilgrimage
Unto a holy heaven—which only they
Who have the Creator’s laws obey 45
Need seek to enter—we should surely wage
War with whatever shortens human life,
And all that leads our Souls away from God;
Should teach all goodness; and they who have trod
In evil paths, with ev’ry misery rife, 50
We ought incessantly to strive to win
To righteousness. We must in love embrace
The meanest outcasts of the human race,
Howe’er defiled by ignorance and sin:
Their own and others good requires that we 55
Should keep them safe—not hang them on “the gallows-tree.”

George Markham Tweddell
p. 38-40 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]

A Dream of the Future.


A Dream of the Future.

When the unholy revelry of War
Has ceased to desolate the world, and when
Peace sheds her blessings broadcast upon men;
When foolish Prejudice has ceased to bar
The path of Progress, and the crushing car 5
Of Ignorance no longer presses down
The intellect; in country and in town
The people will be happy: then ajar
Will stand the gates of Heaven; the earth will teem
With foison[1] of all good; body and mind 10
Both will be nurtured, and all humankind
Be deemed one family; the finest dream
That e’er illuminated any poet’s brain
Be more than realised—Eden come again!

George Markham Tweddell
p. 36 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
Hull Weekly Express, Aug. 16/84. Eastern Morning News, Hull
Advertiser, Aug., 18/84. Cleveland News, Dec. 20/84.
[1 abundance]

The Past, the Present, and Future


The Past, the Present, and Future.
I
Some wish they’d lived the “the good days of old,”
But when these “good days” were, they cannot tell;
Yet they have day-dreams once all things went well,
In some forgotten time. Though we behold
Much that is evil in the present age, 5
I deem it better than all days of yore;
But much remains to be reform’d before
We near perfection. Let us, on the stage
Of life, play well our parts, as men who soar
To higher objects than did e’er engage 10
Our fathers in the Past; and let us wage
War to the death with evils that are hoar
With long antiquity, and prove that we
Are worthy of thy blessings, Liberty!
II
Think not that I under-value what the Past 15
Has won and handed down to us, because
I would press forward until all the laws
Of Nature are obey’d. I stand aghast
When learned men, with eloquence, would fain
Persuade us to retrace our steps; would have 20
Us call the By-gone back from its cold grave;
And forfeit blessings won with toil and pain,
Through centuries of Progress, however slow.
All prejudice must die, and War will then
Cease between nations; and Commerce, when 25
She is unfetter’d where’er waters flow,
To bear the argosies, with sails unfurl’d,
Will bind in cords of love mankind around the world.


III
Men will yet learn to calmly co-operate,
So that fell Want need never more be known! 30
When Ignorance shall from the world have flown,
And Knowledge ta’en its place, then none will hate,
But love, their fellow-creatures. Idlers then,
And not the workers, will be apt to be
Alone the sufferers of penury. 35
All useful labour will be honour’d when
The world is wiser: rulers will seek to train
The mind and body of each child that’s born
In wisdom, strength, and beauty, and adorn
And victual well the workers’ homes. I fain 40
Would live to see this, and the land to be
The heritage of all humanity.

George Markham Tweddell

p. 33-35 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
Sonnets I and II were sent to the Masonic Review, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.,
under the title of “Past and Present,” and were inserted in the issue for
February, 1855. The third Sonnet was added after the other two had been
mailed.

Sonnet for all Politicians of all Parties.


Sonnet for all Politicians of all Parties.

Deem not that minds which think not as thine own
Must be heedless of their country’s good;
For all true men would even shed their blood,
If needed, were it plainly to them shown
it were required, in order to put down 5
Some giant evil that accurst their race.
Fair Freedom’s tree would spread its boughs apace,
Were but the healthy breeze of Knowledge blown
Gently upon its leaves, and the clear sun
Of Virtue aye to warm it with its rays; 10
But ne’er can flourish planted ‘midst the haze
Of Ignorance and Vice. Nor steel nor gun,
However deftly used, can e’er make Free
Those who prize not, above life, Knowledge and Purity.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 32 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
The Rough Ashlar, Adelaide, South Australia, Sept. ’84. The Voice of
Masonry, Chicago, Illinois, U.S., Dec., 1884.

Freedom of Speech


Freedom of Speech.

Calmly, but boldly, speak the honest thought,—
Having first made sure thou hast a thought to speak
Opinions ta’en on trust are often weak
When to the test of truth we see them brought.
A fool in his own folly soon is caught, 5
And ignorance is never far to seek:
They who have wisdom are alone the meek,
But ignorance with impudence is fraught.
The more the laws of Nature are us taught,
The more we shall the bonds of evil break; 10
Even now, methinks, I see the silver streak
Of Wisdom dawning in the world: for naught
But Wisdom—which is Knowledge well applied—
Can win mankind from Vice to Virtue’s side.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 30 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
Newcastle Weekly Chronicle, January 26, 1884.

The March of Progress.


The March of Progress.

I fain would have the world both wise and free;
Men’s minds and bodies nurtured with all good;
Each child supplied with needful clothes and food
And train’d in healthy knowledge, and liberty.
I would have women truly womanly, 5
And not, as now, some toiling hard to gain
Scant food and clothes in poverty and pain;
Whilst others, scorning honest industry,
Waste their whole lives in vain frivolity,—
The toys of fashion, helpmates unto none. 10
The day will come when usefulness alone
Will be esteem’d, and true gentility
Be common unto all. We cannot stay
The March of Progress on its onward way.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 29 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
Voice of Masonry, June, 1890.

Historic Sites.


Historic Sites.

Better that buildings which are linked to fame
Should perish from the earth, than e’er become
So changed their owners would be stricken dumb
To view the desecration: for the name
Of some great man there born, or one who died 5
Or lived there, seems to consecrate the place,
To be severed by all the human race
Able to reverence virtue. With pride,
Not unbecoming, we point out the spot
Where greatness was achieved; and I, for aye, 10
Would keep their rooms unaltered; just as they
Were left us by those dear ones, ne’er forgot.
But, modernised to baseness, let them go—
They give no pleasure—they cause us but woe.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 19 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
New Zealand Masonic Journal, Dunedin, June 1, 1888.

Reformers.


Reformers.

In the wide world, there is full work for all
Who wish to benefit their fellow men,
With eloquent tongue, or with well-practiced pen;
Or deeds of charity, which ever fall
With greater force than either on mankind. 5
Let us not quarrel how it shall be done,
So long as men from Error can be won,
Who now are slaves to Ignorance in mind,
And meanly wallowing in the sloughs of Sin;
But buckle on our armour for the fight, 10
To bravely battle for what seems the Right
To our calm judgements. The brave are sure to win,
If they in God will firmly put their trust,
And see their weapons and their use are just.

George Markham Tweddell
p. 18 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
The Freemasons’ Repository, Providence, Rhode island, U.S., April, 1888

St. Cyril, of Alexandria.

St. Cyril, of Alexandria.

If Cyril was a Saint, may God forbid

That me or mine should be saintly be!
For all you know plunderer’s history
Must grieve that ever such a monster hid
His fiendish soul in human form. For he— 5
A Christian[*] Prelate, who surely bless,
Not curse, his fellows—in their distress,
And murder’d wholesale—in his lust to be
Tyrant o’er mind and body—Pagan and Jew;
And pour’d his causes where his murderous crew 10
Of monks and mob durst not their murders do,
On the Nestorean Christians! nor would bow,
As peaceful citizen, to the civil power,
Which ought to have curb’d him in that evil hour.

George Markham Tweddell

p. 17 [in Miscellaneous Sonnets]
[*] Christian is followed by ‘(?)’ in the text.
Middlesbrough Weekly News, Oct. 27, 1883.
[From 1580 until 1882, St. Cyril was not included in the Roman Catholic
Tradentine Calendar. GMT’s opinion about him reflects that of the Roman
Emperor Theodosius II and this poem may have been written as a call against
Cyril’s inclusion on the new date of February 9th.]