Showing posts with label seasons greetings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seasons greetings. Show all posts

Friday 1 January 2021

It's Our Time.


         HAPPY NEW YEAR to all my associates, friends, comrades, brothers and sisters, known and unknown. May your life be a long healthy walk  in a meadow where love blossoms on every stem, friendship drips from every leaf on every tree, happiness and peace your constant companions.

Visit ann arky's home at https://radicalglasgow.me.uk  

Wednesday 31 December 2014

Awe Ri Best.


      To all those folks who follow this blog and also to the casual passers by, wishing you a great new year. May your goodwill be infectious and swell the happiness of humanity, Let's work harder to bring about that better world that lives in our hearts, let's realise the dream. Tomorrow belongs to us.


Visit ann arky's home at www.radicalglasgow.me.uk

Friday 26 December 2014

What Is Freedom?


   To all the the world, seasons greetings from Percy Bysshe Shelley:


XXXVIII
'Rise like Lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number,
Shake your chains to earth like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you-
Ye are many-they are few.

XXXIX.
'What is Freedom?-ye can tell
That which slavery is, too well-
For its very name has grown
To an echo of your own.

XL.
''Tis to work and have such pay
As just keeps life from day to day
In your limbs, as in a cell
For the tyrants' use to dwell,

XLI.
'So that ye for them are made
Loom, and plough, and sword, and spade,
With or without your own will bent
To their defence and nourishment.

XLII.
''Tis to see your children weak
With their mothers pine and peak,
When the winter winds are bleak,-
They are dying whilst I speak.

XLIII.
''Tis to hunger for such diet
As the rich man in his riot
Casts to the fat dogs that lie
Surfeiting beneath his eye;

XLIV.
''Tis to let the Ghost of Gold
Take from Toil a thousandfold
More than e'er its substance could
In the tyrannies of old.

XLV.
'Paper coin-that forgery
Of the title-deeds, which ye
Hold to something of the worth
Of the inheritance of Earth.

XLVI.
''Tis to be a slave in soul
And to hold no strong control
Over your own wills, but be
All that others make of ye.

XLVII.
'And at length when ye complain
With a murmur weak and vain
'Tis to see the Tyrant's crew
Ride over your wives and you-
Blood is on the grass like dew.

XLVIII.
'Then it is to feel revenge
Fiercely thirsting to exchange
Blood for blood-and wrong for wrong-
Do not thus when ye are strong.
Excerpt from The Mask of Anarchy.
Visit ann arky's home at www.radicalglasgow.me.uk