Here you will find the Poem March of poet Isabella Valancy Crawford
Shall Thor with his hammer Beat on the mountain, As on an anvil, A shackle and fetter? Shall the lame Vulcan Shout as he swingeth God-like his hammer, And forge thee a fetter? Shall Jove, the Thunderer, Twine his swift lightnings With his loud thunders, And forge thee a shackle? 'No,' shouts the Titan, The young lion-throated; 'Thor, Vulcan, nor Jove Cannot shackle and bind me.' Tell what will bind thee, Thou young world-shaker, Up vault our oceans, Down fall our forests. Ship-masts and pillars Stagger and tremble, Like reeds by the margins Of swift running waters. Men's hearts at thy roaring Quiver like harebells Smitten by hailstones, Smitten and shaken. 'O sages and wise men! O bird-hearted tremblers! Come, I will show ye A shackle to bind me. I, the lion-throated, The shaker of mountains! I, the invincible, Lasher of oceans! 'Past the horizon, Its ring of pale azure Past the horizon, Where scurry the white clouds, There are buds and small flowers-- Flowers like snow-flakes, Blossoms like rain-drops, So small and tremulous. Therein a fetter Shall shackle and bind me, Shall weigh down my shouting With their delicate perfume!' But who this frail fetter Shall forge on an anvil, With hammer of feather And anvil of velvet? Past the horizon, In the palm of a valley, Her feet in the grasses, There is a maiden. She smiles on the flowers, They widen and redden, She weeps on the flowers, They grow up and kiss her. She breathes in their bosoms, They breathe back in odours; Inarticulate homage, Dumb adoration. She shall wreathe them in shackles, Shall weave them in fetters; In chains shall she braid them, And me shall she fetter. I, the invincible; March, the earth-shaker; March, the sea-lifter; March, the sky-render; March, the lion-throated. April the weaver Of delicate blossoms, And moulder of red buds-- Shall, at the horizon, Its ring of pale azure, Its scurry of white clouds, Meet in the sunlight.