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Home  »  The Poetical Works In Four Volumes  »  The Curse of the Charter-Breakers

John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892). The Poetical Works in Four Volumes. 1892.

Anti-Slavery Poems

The Curse of the Charter-Breakers

  • The rights and liberties affirmed by Magna Charta were deemed of such importance, in the thirteenth century, that the Bishops, twice a year, with tapers burning, and in their pontifical robes, pronounced, in the presence of the king and the representatives of the estates of England, the greater excommunication against the infringer of that instrument. The imposing ceremony took place in the great Hall of Westminster. A copy of the curse, as pronounced in 1253, declares that, “by the authority of Almighty God, and the blessed Apostles and Martyrs, and all the saints in heaven, all those who violate the English liberties, and secretly or openly, by deed, word, or counsel, do make statutes, or observe them being made, against said liberties, are accursed and sequestered from the company of heaven and the sacraments of the Holy Church.”
  • William Penn, in his admirable political pamphlet, England’s Present Interest Considered, alluding to the curse of the Charter-breakers, says: “I am no Roman Catholic, and little value their other curses; yet I declare I would not for the world incur this curse, as every man deservedly doth, who offers violence to the fundamental freedom thereby repeated and confirmed.”


  • IN Westminster’s royal halls,

    Robed in their pontificals,

    England’s ancient prelates stood

    For the people’s right and good.

    Closed around the waiting crowd,

    Dark and still, like winter’s cloud;

    King and council, lord and knight,

    Squire and yeoman, stood in sight;

    Stood to hear the priest rehearse,

    In God’s name, the Church’s curse,

    By the tapers round them lit,

    Slowly, sternly uttering it.

    “Right of voice in framing laws,

    Right of peers to try each cause;

    Peasant homestead, mean and small,

    Sacred as the monarch’s hall,—

    “Whoso lays his hand on these,

    England’s ancient liberties;

    Whoso breaks, by word or deed,

    England’s vow at Runnymede;

    “Be he Prince or belted knight,

    Whatsoe’er his rank or might,

    If the highest, then the worst,

    Let him live and die accursed.

    “Thou, who to Thy Church hast given

    Keys alike, of hell and heaven,

    Make our word and witness sure,

    Let the curse we speak endure!”

    Silent, while that curse was said,

    Every bare and listening head

    Bowed in reverent awe, and then

    All the people said, Amen!

    Seven times the bells have tolled,

    For the centuries gray and old,

    Since that stoled and mitred band

    Cursed the tyrants of their land.

    Since the priesthood, like a tower,

    Stood between the poor and power;

    And the wronged and trodden down

    Blessed the abbot’s shaven crown.

    Gone, thank God, their wizard spell,

    Lost, their keys of heaven and hell;

    Yet I sigh for men as bold

    As those bearded priests of old.

    Now, too oft the priesthood wait

    At the threshold of the state;

    Waiting for the beck and nod

    Of its power as law and God.

    Fraud exults, while solemn words

    Sanctify his stolen hoards;

    Slavery laughs, while ghostly lips

    Bless his manacles and whips.

    Not on them the poor rely,

    Not to them looks liberty,

    Who with fawning falsehood cower

    To the wrong, when clothed with power.

    Oh, to see them meanly cling,

    Round the master, round the king,

    Sported with, and sold and bought,—

    Pitifuller sight is not!

    Tell me not that this must be:

    God’s true priest is always free;

    Free, the needed truth to speak,

    Right the wronged, and raise the weak.

    Not to fawn on wealth and state,

    Leaving Lazarus at the gate;

    Not to peddle creeds like wares;

    Not to mutter hireling prayers;

    Nor to paint the new life’s bliss

    On the sable ground of this;

    Golden streets for idle knave,

    Sabbath rest for weary slave!

    Not for words and works like these,

    Priest of God, thy mission is;

    But to make earth’s desert glad,

    In its Eden greenness clad;

    And to level manhood bring

    Lord and peasant, serf and king;

    And the Christ of God to find

    In the humblest of thy kind!

    Thine to work as well as pray,

    Clearing thorny wrongs away;

    Plucking up the weeds of sin,

    Letting heaven’s warm sunshine in;

    Watching on the hills of Faith;

    Listening what the spirit saith,

    Of the dim-seen light afar,

    Growing like a nearing star.

    God’s interpreter art thou,

    To the waiting ones below;

    ’Twixt them and its light midway

    Heralding the better day;

    Catching gleams of temple spires,

    Hearing notes of angel choirs,

    Where, as yet unseen of them,

    Comes the New Jerusalem!

    Like the seer of Patmos gazing,

    On the glory downward blazing;

    Till upon Earth’s grateful sod

    Rests the City of our God!

    1848.