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Mine and Thine (1904)/Coronation—To King Edward VII

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This poem was not included in Mrs. Coates' collected Poems (1916, in 2 vols.).

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604016Mine and Thine (1904) — Coronation—To King Edward VIIFlorence Earle Coates

CORONATION—TO KING EDWARD VII

If thou be crowned, or if thou be not crowned
With that imperial round
Thy forbears from the distant ages wore,
Sorrow and suffering for thee have earned
A guerdon fairer than thy hope discerned;
And through renunciation, thou hast found
A cirque of sovereignty not dreamed before.


If thou be crowned? Nay, thou art crowned now;
For, lo! upon thy brow,
So lately shadowed by Death's mournful wing,
A mighty people's sympathy has laid
An aureole whose brightness shall not fade:
Whose light, more worth than chrism, or seal, or vow,
Sceptre or throne, makes thee, indeed, a King!