The following was printed in a collection of tributes to W E Gladstone following his death in May 1898. It was edited by Samuel Jacob and Chas F Forshaw and Published by Elliot Stock 62 Paternoster Row London. G. K. Chesterton's tribute was printed in The Speaker and is as follows; Lift up your heads; in life, in death, God knoweth his head was high; Quit we the coward's broken breath, Who watched a strong man die. If ye must say "No more his peer Cometh: the flag is furled," Stand not too near him; lest we hear That slander on the world The good green earth he loved and trod Is still, with many a scar, Writ in the chronicles of God A giant-bearing star. He fell: but Britain's banner swings Above his sunken crown; Black Death shall have his toil of kings Before the cross goes down. O young ones of a darker day, In Art's wan colours clad, Whose very love and hate are grey, Whose very sin is sad, Pass on: one agony long-drawn Was merrier than your mirth; When hand in hand came death and dawn And spring was on the earth.