Bulmer, Agnes
1 2024-09-14T12:59:40+00:00 Christopher Ohge 67a4fbaba4797c94aa865988788fca89b5c37616 1 2 Person record for Agnes Bulmer plain 2024-09-14T13:00:41+00:00 Christopher Ohge 67a4fbaba4797c94aa865988788fca89b5c37616Bulmer, Agnes Collinson
Name ID: https://viaf.org/viaf/306133896/
Born: 1775
Died: 1836
Faith: Methodist
Note: Born in London, Bulmer was a poet who belonged to the Wesleyan community, having been
admitted by Charles Wesley himself. Her major publications include Memoirs of Mrs.
Mortimer and a 12-book epic poem entitled Messiah's Kingdom (1833). This poem, consisting
of nearly fourteen thousand verses, is one of the longest works of poetry composed
by a woman. See also the Wikidata item and Andrew O. Winckles' 'The Book of Nature
and the Methodist Epic: Agnes Bulmer's Analogic Poetics and the End(s) of Romanticism'
Womens Writing 22:2 (2015), pp. 209–28 (https://doi.org/10.1080/09699082.2015.1011841).
This page is referenced by:
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Song, by Agnes Bulmer
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the negro is free!
Hark! a voice from the islands, a voice from the seas,
Rolls hoarse o'er the waters, floats light on the breeze;
It gladdens the morn in her mantle of light,
And steals soft on the silence of star-spangled night.
O list! 'tis the wide-wafted echo of songs
Uprising from regions, where Africa's wrongs
Till now have repressed the sweet music of joy,
Where the watch-word of Guilt was "Debase, and destroy."
O list! 'tis the trumpet of Justice; -- the voice
Of Humanity swells the grand chorus, "Rejoice!"
Rejoice! for Oppression's galled victim is free!
Re-echo his gladness, ye isles of the sea!
'Tis thy jubilee, Africa! long, long delayed,
For thy year of release thou hast patiently stayed:
Yet fell not thy tears, with thy blood, on the soil,
Unpitied by Him who regarded thy toil.
He spake, and the voices of Albion arose,
Like the rush of wild waves, that tumultuously close
Round the throne of her pride, 'midst the crags of the deep,
Where her trident gleams bright, and her broad banners sweep.
Hark! multitudes -- multitudes utter the cry,
The mountains receive it, the vallies reply,
"From the white cliffs of Albion be cleansed the dark stain
"Of the blood of the negro, -- be broken his chain!"
'Tis done! the stern lion hath loosed from his hold,
The victim he mangled; -- nor rapine, nor gold,
Though cruel as murder, though fell as despair,
Shall drag him again to his crimson-dyed lair.
O Albion! the happy, the favoured, the free,
Be light in thy dwellings, thou gem of the sea;
O fadeless and fair be the wreath on thy brow,
Be Africa's favoured, as happy as thou!
Her children have laboured, have suffered for thee,
Now, ruthless no longer, thou bidst her be free;
O wipe the sad tear-drops with lenient hand,
And be kind to instruct, who wast stern to command!
So the Isles of the Ocean thy banners shall bless,
The prayer of the stranger shall bring thee success;
And thy shield of defence, and the sword of thy might,
Shall be girded by Freedom, and wielded by Right.
Agnes Bulmer. -
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Liberty, by Agnes Bulmer
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Poem by by Agnes Bulmer
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1833
I.Fair Liberty! I love thy cheerful mien,When lightly bounding o'er rude mountains grey,In sportive fawn or antlered roebuck seen,Or squirrel darting in fantastic playAmid the leafy shadeBy sylvan forests made;Or timid cony fleet,Dancing on downy feet,To crop the springing blade with early flowerets gay.
II.I love thee in the wild-rose clustered fair,With blossoms tinted soft as beauty's cheek,--In woodbines, breathing perfume on the air,In hedge-row, violet, or daisy meek;In fragrant eglantine,In tendril'd plants, that twine,Simple, and wild, and free,O'er bower, and branch, and tree,And nature's softest charms in graceful silence speak.
III.I hail thee on the sprightly skylark's wing,Trilling glad welcome to the lord of day;In woodland notes, that greet the ear of Spring,Descending mild; in roseate garland's gay,Fanned by Favonian gales,As bright, through breezy vales,Or o'er rejoicing meadsHer jocund train she leads,While Echo blithe awakes, responsive to their lay.When proud she piles her mountain-heights sublime,Rides the rude billows of the rolling sea,Or, charioted in clouds, from clime to climeHer bolted thunder bears,Her fiery shaft prepares,Unfurls the whirlwind's wing,Bids clashing tempests ring,And with embattling spheres confounds the sons of time.
V.By Nature loved and cherished, thou to man,Sweet Liberty, as Heaven's best boon, art dear:Man formed erect, with godlike port, to scanThe Deity!--His glorious image here:He triumphs in thy smile,And holds thee proud the while,Blest birthright of his soul,Which owns but one control,And yields to God alone, its worship, praise, and fear.
VI.He spurns the chain: the prison'd eagle, lessRuffles his plumes, immured in captive-thrall;Though manacles his withering limbs oppress,Though sad beneath fell torture's scourge he fall,Yet claims his spirit highIts conscious dignity,And stern with swelling breast,Thoughts, but to Heaven expressed,His angered manhood chafes, when ruthless fetters gall.
VII.Man is Heaven's offspring; Heaven in grace benign,With sacred sympathies inspired his soul,Bade holy Love her silken cords entwine,To hold sweet Liberty in soft control;Love leads with gentlest rein,That huntress of the plain;With golden link she bindsThe bravest loftiest minds,And stills, with charmed voice, rude passion's restless roll.
VIII.Love, sweet ally of Freedom, gently bindsThe social compact with affection's cord,Yet spurns the wild misrule of lawless minds,The frantic reign of Anarchy abhorred:The wise, the good, from thee,O sacred Liberty!Alone the wreath receive,Which Truth and Justice weave,And Virtue only wears, by Honour's just award.
IX.Not thine the roar of democratic strife,Tumultuous as the ever-surging wave,To battle-field transforming peaceful life,Where proud ambition tempts his venturous slaveWith meteor-halos bright,That shine with dubious light,Till envious Darkness shroudsThe wildering beam with clouds,And o'er his unhoused head impetuous tempests rave.
X.Nor art thou she, loud boast of classic song,With brows bright wreathed by Victory and Fame,Whom Genius honoured, whom the brave, the strong,Invested with thy glory and thy name:That plumed goddess proud,To whom the boisterous crowdTheir servile worship paid,Who states and senates swayed,While warrior voices stern upheld her dauntless claim.
XI.Yet was she fierce, and turbulent, and wild,The pageant idol of ungoverned will,Unused to social gentleness, the childOf truant Nature, restless, roving still;But thou, of gentler mood,Delightest not in rudeAnd ever-changing strife,No hurricane thy life,But pure and healthful gales thy floating canvas fill.
XII.Yes! Liberty is order, virtue, peace,'Tis valour, when the right her sword demands;She bids the jarring voice of Discord cease,Her heart is warm with charity, her handsBeneficence employs;To calm Contentment's joysHer holy aid she lends,On Truth's bright path attends,And cheers with blitheful song rude Labour's swarthy bands.
XIII.Britannia! dost thou boast thyself the child,The friend of Freedom, since on mountains rude,Through desert glens, and woodland forests wild,Thy roving step the hunter's toil pursued?Dost thou rejoice to ownA proud and stately throne,'Midst circling waters placed,By Truth and Justice based,And long by distant lands with wondering envy viewed?
XIV.Say, dost thou glory in the sevenfold mightOf sacred Law's impenetrable shield?Revere impartial Justice? for the right,Prepared the balance or the sword to wield?Hast thou not learned to prizeLife's sweetest, tenderest ties,Secure from ruffian handsOf cruel spoiler bands,More fell than evening wolves that scour the pasture field?
XV.Cradled on ocean billows, thou hast borneThy trident-sceptre with a steadfast hand,Thy noble brow the victor's wreath hath worn,Of laurels culled in many a far-famed land;Can then thy generous mind,With servile fetters bindA brother's neck, as free,A heart, to LibertyBound firmly as thine own, by Nature's kindly band?
XVI.Hark! comes there not a wailing on the blast?A voice, as if the Genius of the deep,From yon wide weltering water-floods, had cast,On some lorn strand, a lonely wretch, to weepThe wreck of cherished bliss?Hope's brightest promises,His drear and rueful fate,Lost, lonely, desolate,Where only wild winds rave and surging billows sweep?
XVII.Britannia! comes not such a voice to thee,That blends upbraidings with its woe-worn wail?Is not Hope wrecked in dire captivity?And hoarser, harsher, than wild tempest-gale,Or boisterous billow's roar,On rude, bleak, barren shore,Comes not to Slavery's ear,Oppression's voice of fear?And tells not Afric wronged as sad and dark a tale?
XVIII.Oh! thou hast sinned, even Nature's parent voiceAttaints the baseness of thy treacherous crime;Beneath bright skies, her blooming isles rejoice,Her flowers breathe fragrance, and her woods sublimeWave in the laughing wind;But earth-born Avarice, blind,With foul pestiferous breath,Hath scattered seeds of death,To rise in rifest plagues through long succeeding time.
XIX.But, no! a deprecating prayer ascends,And suppliant hands are lifted to the skies;Closed long,--too long--yet now proud Albion bendsHer listening ear to Afric's mournful cries;She burns to break the chain,To cleanse the dark, dark stainFrom those fair isles away;To pour the gladdening rayOf Liberty and light on Slavery's tear-dimmed eyes.
XX.Arouse thee, Albion! thou whose lofty neckCould never stoop the captive's yoke to bear;No more thy brows with clustering roses deck,With Victory's chaplet, wreathe thy sun-bright hair,Till thy stern lion bold,Loose from his murderous holdHis lacerated prey;Till, where the tortured victim writhing lay,Justice and Peace benign plant Freedom's standard fair.
Agnes Bulmer.
This page references:
- 1 2023-08-01T11:12:51+00:00 Methodist 1 plain 2023-08-01T11:12:51+00:00