Poems (Ford)/My Native Land

MY NATIVE LAND.
I love thee, oh, my native land!Love is a word too weakThe boundless worship to expressThat words but faintly speak;Thou art an idol at whose shrineMy soul must bend the knee;Life were but death without the hopeOf brighter days for thee.
Thou'rt beautiful, my native land!Up from thy flowery sodFair Nature lifts a smiling faceTo meet the smile of God;Thy giant mountains robed in blue,Thy vales in deathless green,Bathed in thy tears are fairer still,Our beauteous captive queen.
Oh, land of hero, saint and sage,So sad and yet so fair,Thy limbs are bound with heavy chains,Thy heart is crushed with care; And yet, the more thou'rt made to groanBeneath the tyrant's hand,The stronger grows my love for thee,My worshipped native land.
Although thy bitter wrongs increaseWith every passing year,Thy sorrows to thy children's heartsBut make thee still more dear;Though forced far from thy shore to stray,On many a distant strand,From every heart the prayer leaps out:"God bless the old Green Land!"
Oh, land of beauty, land of song,God's blessing on thee rest;May Freedom's sun soon light thy shore,Fair Island of the West;Soon 'midst the nations of the earthMay'st thou a nation stand,With chainless limbs and laureled brow,My land—my native land.