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Survivors
No doubt they'll soon get well; the shock and strainHave caused their stammering, disconnected talk.Of course they're "longing to go out again," -These boys with old, scared faces, learning to walk,They'll soon forget their haunted nights; their cowedSubjection to the ghosts of friends who died, -Their dreams that drip with murder; and they'll be proudOf glorious war that shatter'd all their pride ...Men who went out to battle, grim and glad;Children, with eyes that hate you, broken and mad.CRAIGLOCKART, Oct. 1917.
Siegfried Sassoon
One-Man-One-Vote
ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! You hear the people shouting.The walls of Mammon tremble ere they fall.ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! Is this a time for doubting?The poets have been prophets after all.ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! The cry is growing stronger!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! It echoes oer the wave!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! The Wealthy dead no longerShall rule us through their children from the grave!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! The knell of Retrogression!The greatest triumph of the tongue and pen!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! The right of long possessionIs right no longer in the minds of men!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! Theres lightning in the thunder!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! The reign of Greed is oer!ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE! The cursed Vote of PlunderShall rule the plundered slaves of earth no more.ONE-MAN-...
Henry Lawson
The American Consummation.
The day of War is overWhen, to please a Prince alone,A thousand slaughtered wretchesWere to the eagles thrown.There is gloom upon its glory,There is rust upon its sword,For the day of Peace is dawningIn the coming of the Lord.Arise in Christian manhoodAnd join the joyous throng,With Jesus in your musicAnd His mercy in your song;For His blood hath been the ransomFor the World, for you, for me,And His love o'erflows the mountainsIn an everlasting sea.For the Christ who rose in gloryShall return to earth the same,And the warring hosts shall vanishAt the voicing of His name;And the stars shall flash new splendorsAt the fulness of His grace,For the Heavens reflect His glory,And the Earth shall sh...
A. H. Laidlaw
The Bride Of War
(ARNOLD'S MARCH TO CANADA, 1775)IThe trumpet, with a giant sound,Its harsh war-summons wildly sings;And, bursting forth like mountain-springs,Poured from the hillside camping-ground,Each swift battalion shouting flingsIts force in line; where you may seeThe men, broad-shouldered, heavilySway to the swing of the march; their headsDark like the stones in river-beds.Lightly the autumn breezesPlay with the shining dust-cloudRising to the sunset raysFrom feet of the moving column.Soft, as you listen, comesThe echo of iterant drums,Brought by the breezes lightFrom the files that follow the road.A moment their guns have glowedSun-smitten: then out of sightThey suddenly sink,Like men who touch...
George Parsons Lathrop
Thus Saith The Lord, I Offer Thee Three Things.
In poisonous dens, where traitors hideLike bats that fear the day,While all the land our charters claimIs sweating blood and breathing flame,Dead to their country's woe and shame,The recreants whisper STAY!In peaceful homes, where patriot firesOn Love's own altars glow,The mother hides her trembling fear,The wife, the sister, checks a tear,To breathe the parting word of cheer,Soldier of Freedom, Go!In halls where Luxury lies at ease,And Mammon keeps his state,Where flatterers fawn and menials crouch,The dreamer, startled from his couch,Wrings a few counters from his pouch,And murmurs faintly WAIT!In weary camps, on trampled plainsThat ring with fife and drum,The battling host, whose harness gleams...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Day's Work
We now, held in captivity,Spring to our bondage nor grieve,See now, how it is blesseder,Brothers, to give than receive!Keep trust, wherefore we were made,Paying the debt that we owe;For a clean thrust, and the shear of the blade,Will carry us where would go.The Ship that Found Herself.All the world over, nursing their scars,Sir the old fighting-men broke in the wars,Sit the old fighting-men, surly and grimMocking the lilt of the conquerors' hymn.Dust of the battle o'erwhelmed them and hid.Fame never found them for aught that they did.Wounded and spent to the lazar they drew,Lining the road where the Legions roll through.Sons of the Laurel who press to your meed,Worthy God's pity most, you who succeed!)Ere you...
Rudyard
The Martial Courage Of A Day Is Vain
The martial courage of a day is vain,An empty noise of death the battle's roar,If vital hope be wanting to restore,Or fortitude be wanting to sustain,Armies or kingdoms. We have heard a strainOf triumph, how the labouring Danube boreA weight of hostile corses; drenched with goreWere the wide fields, the hamlets heaped with slain.Yet see (the mighty tumult overpast)Austria a daughter of her Throne hath sold!And her Tyrolean Champion we beholdMurdered, like one ashore by shipwreck cast,Murdered without relief. Oh! blind as bold,To think that such assurance can stand fast!
William Wordsworth
The Lay Of The Laborer.
A spade! a rake! a hoe!A pickaxe, or a bill!A hook to reap, or a scythe to mow,A flail, or what ye will -And here's a ready handTo ply the needful tool,And skill'd enough, by lessons rough,In Labor's rugged school.To hedge, or dig the ditch,To lop or fell the tree,To lay the swarth on the sultry field,Or plough the stubborn lea;The harvest stack to bind,The wheaten rick to thatch,And never fear in my pouch to findThe tinder or the match.To a flaming barn or farmMy fancies never roam;The fire I yearn to kindle and burnIs on the hearth of Home;Where children huddle and crouchThrough dark long winter days,Where starving children huddle and crouch,To see the cheerful rays,A-glowing on the ...
Thomas Hood
An Alliance
This is the weird of a world-old folk,That not till the last link breaks,Not till the night is blackest,The blood of Hengist wakes.When the sun is black in heaven,The moon as blood above,And the earth is full of hatred,This people tells its love.In change, eclipse, and peril,Under the whole world's scorn,By blood and death and darknessThe Saxon peace is sworn;That all our fruit be gathered,And all our race take hands,And the sea be a Saxon riverThat runs through Saxon lands.Lo! not in vain we bore him;Behold it! not in vain,Four centuries' dooms of tortureChoked in the throat of Spain,Ere priest or tyrant triumph--We know how well--we know--Bone of that bone can whiten,Blood of that blood ca...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
A Utilitarian View Of The Monitor's Fight
Plain be the phrase, yet apt the verse,More ponderous than nimble;For since grimed War here laid asideHis Orient pomp, 'twould ill befit Overmuch to plyThe rhyme's barbaric cymbal.Hail to victory without the gaudOf glory; zeal that needs no fansOf banners; plain mechanic powerPlied cogently in War now placed-- Where War belongs--Among the trades and artisans.Yet this was battle, and intense--Beyond the strife of fleets heroic;Deadlier, closer, calm 'mid storm;No passion; all went on by crank, Pivot, and screw,And calculations of caloric.Needless to dwell; the story's known.The ringing of those plates on platesStill ringeth round the world--The clangor of that blacksmiths' fray. T...
Herman Melville
Le Temps Passé
Those brave old days when King Abuse did reign We sigh for, but we shall not see again. Then Eldon sowed the seed of equity That grew to bounteous harvest, and with glee A Bar of modest numbers shared the grain. Then lived the pleaders who could issues feign, Who blushed not to aver that France or Spain Was in the Ward of Chepe;[I] no more can be Those brave old days. O'er pauper settlements men fought amain, And golden guineas followed in their train, John Doe then flourished like a lusty tree, And Richard Roe brought many a noble fee, We mourn in unremunerated pain Those brave old days.
James Williams
To the United States Senate
[Revelation 16: Verses 16-19] And must the Senator from Illinois Be this squat thing, with blinking, half-closed eyes? This brazen gutter idol, reared to power Upon a leering pyramid of lies? And must the Senator from Illinois Be the world's proverb of successful shame, Dazzling all State house flies that steal and steal, Who, when the sad State spares them, count it fame? If once or twice within his new won hall His vote had counted for the broken men; If in his early days he wrought some good - We might a great soul's sins forgive him then. But must the Senator from Illinois Be vindicated by fat kings of gold? And must he be belauded by the smirched, The sleek, unca...
Vachel Lindsay
Battle
ITHE RETURNHe went, and he was gay to go:And I smiled on him as he went.My boy! 'Twas well he couldn't knowMy darkest dread, or what it meant -Just what it meant to smile and smileAnd let my son go cheerily -My son ... and wondering all the whileWhat stranger would come back to me.IITHE DANCERSAll day beneath the hurtling shellsBefore my burning eyesHover the dainty demoiselles -The peacock dragon-flies.Unceasingly they dart and glanceAbove the stagnant stream -And I am fighting here in FranceAs in a senseless dream.A dream of shattering black shellsThat hurtle overhead,And dainty dancing demoisellesAbove the dreamless dead.III
Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
Warrior's Longing
I would like to lie in my bedIn a white shirt,Wished the beard was gone,The head combed.The fingers were clean,The nails also,You, my tender woman,Might provide peace.
Alfred Lichtenstein
The Ploughman
Anniversary Of The Berkshire Agricultural Society, October 4, 1849Clear the brown path, to meet his coulter's gleam!Lo! on he comes, behind his smoking team,With toil's bright dew-drops on his sunburnt brow,The lord of earth, the hero of the plough!First in the field before the reddening sun,Last in the shadows when the day is done,Line after line, along the bursting sod,Marks the broad acres where his feet have trod;Still, where he treads, the stubborn clods divide,The smooth, fresh furrow opens deep and wide;Matted and dense the tangled turf upheaves,Mellow and dark the ridgy cornfield cleaves;Up the steep hillside, where the laboring trainSlants the long track that scores the level plain;Through the moist valley, clogged with oozing cl...
Booth's Drum
They were ratty they were hooted by the meanest and the least,When they woke the Drum of Glory long ago in London East.They were often mobbed by hoodlums, they were few, but unafraid,And their Lassies were insulted, but they banged the drum, and prayed.Prayed in public for the sinners, prayed in private for release,Till they saved some brawny lumpers, then they banged the drum in peace.(Saved some prize-fighter and burglars), and they banged the drum in peace.Booths Drum.He was hook-nosed, he was scrawny,He was nothing of a Don.And his business ways seemed Yiddish,And his speeches kid, or kiddish;And we doubted his convictions,But his drum is going on.Oh, they drummed it ever onward with old Blood-and-Fire unfurled,And they drumm...
Arms And The Man. - The Embattled Colonies.
Before this thought the present hour recedes,As from the beach a billow backward rolls,And the great past, rich in heroic deedsIlluminates our souls!Stern Massachusetts Bay uplifts her form,Boston the tale of Lexington repeats,With breast unarmored she confronts the storm -New England England meets.I see the Middle Group by Fortune madeThe bloody Flanders of the Northern Coast,And, in a varying play of light and shade,Host thundering fall on host.I see the Carolinas, Georgia, mowedBy War the Reaper, and grim Ruin stalkO'er wasted fields; - but Guilford paved the way That led to this same York.Here, too, Virginia in the vision comes -Full-bent to crown the battle's closing arch,Her pulses trumpets and h...
James Barron Hope
The Assault Heroic
Down in the mud I lay,Tired out by my long dayOf five damned days and nights,Five sleepless days and nights, ...Dream-snatched, and set me whereThe dungeon of DespairLooms over Desolate Sea,Frowning and threatening meWith aspect high and steep,A most malignant keep.My foes that lay withinShouted and made a din,Hooted and grinned and cried:"Today we've killed your pride;Today your ardour ends.We've murdered all your friends;We've undermined by stealthYour happiness and your health.We've taken away your hope;Now you may droop and mopeTo misery and to Death."But with my spear of Faith,Stout as an oaken rafter,With my round shield of laughter,With my sharp, tongue-like swordThat speaks a bitter ...
Robert von Ranke Graves