Page:A treasury of war poetry, British and American poems of the world war, 1914-1919.djvu/9
From Wikisource
This page has been validated.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sir Henry Newbolt | The Vigil | 43 | ||
| John Galsworthy | England to Free Men | 44 | ||
| Charles William Brodribb | Expeditional | 45 | ||
| Lance-Corporal Francis Ledwidge | Evening in England | 46 | ||
| C. Fox Smith | Saint George of England | 46 | ||
| George Herbert Clarke | Lines Written in Surrey, 1917 | 47 | ||
| John Freeman | Sweet England | 48 | ||
| Henry Lawson | England Yet | 50 | ||
| Lieutenant Leonard Van Noppen | "Burn up the World" | 51 | ||
| Lieutenant Leonard Van Noppen | England | 52 | ||
| Rudyard Kipling | "For all we have and are" | 52 |
| Neil Munro | Pipes in Arras | 54 | ||
| Neil Munro | "Lochaber no More" | 56 | ||
| Isabel Westcott Harper | Highland Night, 1715—1815—1915 | 56 |
| Norreys Jephson O'Conor | Moira's Keening | 58 | ||
| Winifred M. Letts | The Connaught Rangers | 59 | ||
| Lieutenant T. M. Kettle | A Song of the Irish Armies | 60 |
| Marjorie L. C. Pickthall | Canada to England | 62 | ||
| Wilfred Campbell | Langemarck | 62 | ||
| Will H. Ogilvie | Canadians | 66 |