Great Poems of the World War. William Dunseath Eaton

Great Poems of the World War - William Dunseath Eaton


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As men have ever stood,

       Down, down shall crash our temples,

       The Evil and the Good;

       Yea, all that now we cherish

       Must pass—but not in vain.

       The gods we love shall perish;

       The sons of the gods shall reign!

      So, strong in faith, or weak in doubt,

       Or berserk-mad, we range

       Our spears in that long battle

       Which means not Death, but Change.

       Our highest with our lowest

       Must own the grim behest,

       And Good shall yield for Better—

       Else how should come the Best?

       Yet if we win our portion

       How dare we crave the whole?

       And if we still press forward,

       Why need we know the goal?

       But those whose hearts are constant

       And those whose souls are wise

       Have said that from our ashes

       A nobler race shall rise

       From shreds of shattered altars

       To rear the Perfect Fane.

       Our little gods must perish

       That God Himself shall reign!

       WILLIAM HERSCHELL

       Table of Contents

      in The Indianapolis News

      Permission to reproduce in this book

      THE Kid has gone to the Colors

       And we don’t know what to say;

       The Kid we have loved and cuddled

       Stepped out for the Flag today.

       We thought him a child, a baby,

       With never a care at all,

       But his country called him man-size

       And the Kid has heard the call.

      He paused to watch the recruiting

       Where, fired by the fife and drum,

       He bowed his head to Old Glory

       And thought that it whispered: “Come!”

       The Kid, not being a slacker,

       Stood forth with patriot-joy

       To add his name to the roster—

       And God, we’re proud of the boy!

      The Kid has gone to the Colors;

       It seems but a little while

       Since he drilled a schoolboy army

       In a truly martial style.

       But now he’s a man, a soldier,

       And we lend him listening ear,

       For his heart is a heart all loyal,

       Unscourged by the curse of fear.

      His dad, when he told him, shuddered,

       His mother—God bless her!—cried;

       Yet, blest with a mother-nature, She wept with a mother-pride. But he whose old shoulders straightened Was Granddad—for memory ran To years when he, too, a youngster, Was changed by the Flag to a man!

       HERBERT KAUFMAN

       Table of Contents

      From Mr. Kaufman’s book of poems, “The Hell-Gate of Soissons.” T. Fisher Unwin, Publishers (all rights reserved), London, England. Special permission to reproduce in this book.

      “Just for a word, ‘neutrality’ … just for a scrap of paper, Great Britain was going to make war.”—The German Chancellor to the British Ambassador in Berlin.

      JUST for a “scrap of paper,”

       Just for a Nation’s word,

       Just for a clean tradition,

       Just for a treaty slurred;

       Just for a pledge defaulted,

       Just for a dastard blow,

       Just for an ally’s summons,

       Just for a friend struck low;

       Just for the weal of progress,

       Just for a trust held dear,

       Just for the rights of mankind,

       Just for a duty clear;

       Just for a Prussian insult,

       Just for a splendid cause,

       Just for the hope of progress,

       Just for the might of laws;

       Just for the kingdom’s peril,

       Just for a deed of shame,

       Just for defense of honor,

       Just for the British name!

       CAPT. JOHN MILLS HANSON, F.A.

       Table of Contents

      in The Stars and Stripes, A.E.F., France

      POPPIES in the wheat fields on the pleasant hills of France,

       Reddening in the summer breeze that bids them nod and dance;

       Over them the skylark sings his lilting, liquid tune—

       Poppies in the wheat fields, and all the world in June.

      Poppies in the wheat fields on the road to Monthiers—

       Hark, the spiteful rattle where the masked machine guns play!

       Over them the shrapnel’s song greets the summer morn—

       Poppies in the wheat fields—but, ah, the fields are torn.

      See the stalwart Yankee lads, never ones to blench,

       Poppies in their helmets as they clear the shallow trench,

       Leaping down the furrows with eager, boyish tread

       Through the poppied wheat fields to the flaming woods ahead.

      Poppies in the wheat fields as sinks the summer sun,

       Broken, bruised and trampled—but the bitter day is won;

       Yonder in the woodland where the flashing rifles shine,

       With their poppies in their helmets, the front files hold the line.

      Poppies in the wheat fields; how still beside them lie

       Scattered forms that stir not when the star shells burst on high;

       Gently bending o’er them beneath the moon’s soft glance,

       Poppies of the wheat fields on the ransomed hills of France.

       LIEUT. L. W. SUCKERT, A.S., U.S.A.

       Table


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