A treasury of war poetry, British and American poems of the world war, 1914-1919/Poets Militant
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POETS MILITANT
THE SOLDIER
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IF I should die, think only this of me:
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SAFETY
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DEAR! of all happy in the hour, most blest |
PEACE
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NOW, God be thanked Who has matched us with His hour,
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I HAVE A RENDEZVOUS WITH DEATH . .
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I HAVE a rendezvous with Death
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CHAMPAGNE, 1914—15
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IN the glad revels, in the happy fêtes,
Champagne, France, |
INTO BATTLE
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THE naked earth is warm with Spring,
Flanders, April, 1915. |
THE PLACE
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BLOSSOMS as old as May I scatter here,
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EVENING CLOUDS
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A LITTLE flock of clouds go down to rest
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SONGS FROM AN EVIL WOOD
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I THERE is no wrath in the stars,
II Somewhere lost in the haze
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III The great guns of England, they listen mile on mile
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IV I met with Death in his country,
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EXPECTANS EXPECTAVI
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FROM morn to midnight, all day through,
May, 1915. |
"ALL THE HILLS AND VALES ALONG"
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ALL the hills and vales along
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TO MY BROTHER
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THIS will I do when we have peace again,
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A PETITION
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ALL that a man might ask thou hast given me, England, |
THE NEW SCHOOL
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THE halls that were loud with the merry tread of young and careless feet
[From Main Street and Other Poems. Copyright, 1917, by George H. Doran Company.] |
KINGS
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THE Kings of the earth are men of might,
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[From Main Street and Other Poems. Copyright, 1917, by George H. Doran Company.]
COMRADES: AN EPISODE
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BEFORE, before he was aware * * * * * Then Gates slowly saw the morn * * * * * The silent sun over the earth held sway,
* * * * * The parapet was reached. In Hospital, London, |
FULFILMENT
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WAS there love once? I have forgotten her.
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THE DAY'S MARCH
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THE battery grides and jingles,
. . . . . The battery grides and jingles,
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THE TROOPS
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DIM, gradual thinning of the shapeless gloom
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TRENCH DUTY
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SHAKEN from sleep, and numbed and scarce awake, |
MAGPIES IN PICARDY
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THE magpies in Picardy
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THE FACE
(Guillemont)
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OUT of the smoke of men's wrath,
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THE SIGN
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WE are here in a wood of little beeches:
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THE TRENCHES
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ENDLESS lanes sunken in the clay,
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TRANSPORT
(Courcelles)
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THE moon swims in milkiness,
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NO MAN'S LAND
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NO MAN'S LAND is an eerie sight
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"ON LES AURA!"
Soldat Jacques Bonhomme loquitur:
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SEE you that stretch of shell-torn mud spotted with pools of mire,
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THE LAST POST
(June, 1916)
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THE bugler sent a call of high romance— |
ON A TROOPSHIP, 1915
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FAREWELL! the village leaning to the hill, |
THE VOLUNTEER
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HERE lies a clerk who half his life had spent
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BEFORE THE CHARGE
(Loos, 1915)
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THE night is still and the air is keen,
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IN THE MORNING
(Loos, 1915)
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THE firefly haunts were lighted yet,
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HOME THOUGHTS FROM LAVENTIE
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GREEN gardens in Laventie!
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REINCARNATION
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I TOO remember distant golden days
Ramparts, Ypres, July, 1916. |
LIGHT AFTER DARKNESS
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ONCE more the Night like some great dark drop-scene
Hulluch Road, October, 1915. |
TO A SKYLARK BEHIND OUR TRENCHES
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THOU little voice! Thou happy sprite,
France, May, 1916. |
THE BUGLER
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GOD dreamed a man; [Written in a German prison camp.] |
BEFORE GINCHY
September, 1916
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YON poisonous clod,
. . . . . . . . . They say we change, we men that come out here.
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NEXT MORNING
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I TO-DAY the sun shines bright, II Thus much I see.—But there's a spot |
THE CRICKETERS OF FLANDERS
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THE first to climb the parapet
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A FINGER AND A HUGE, THICK THUMB
(A Ballad of the Trenches)
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IT was nearly twelve o'clock by the sergeant's watch;
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SONNETS
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I I SEE across the chasm of flying years
II The falling rain is music overhead,
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GOD'S HILLS
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IN our hill-country of the North,
("Edward Melbourne") William Noel Hodgson |
HEADQUARTERS
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A LEAGUE and a league from the trenches—from the traversed maze of the lines,
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AMMUNITION COLUMN
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I AM only a cog in a giant machine, a link of an endless chain:
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THE VOICE OF THE GUNS
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WE are the guns, and your masters! Saw ye our flashes?
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A KISS
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SHE kissed me when she said good-bye—
August 1916. |
THE POPLARS
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O, a lush green English meadow—it's there that I would lie—
A dance of leaves in ether, of leaves threadbare and sere,
Oxford, September, 1916. |
THE CATHEDRAL
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HOPE and mirth are gone. Beauty is departed.
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MEMORIES
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FAR up at Glorian the wind is sighing.
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LINES WRITTEN IN A FIRE-TRENCH[1]
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TIS midnight, and above the hollow trench, |
BACK TO LONDON: A POEM OF LEAVE
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I HAVE not wept when I have seen
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GERMAN PRISONERS
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WHEN first I saw you in the curious street |
THE CHALLENGE OF THE GUNS
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BY day, by night, along the lines their dull boom rings,
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RED POPPIES IN THE CORN
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I'VE seen them in the morning light,
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HORSE BATHING PARADE
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A FEW clouds float across the grand blue sky, |
BEFORE ACTION
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BY all the glories of the day
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AFTER ACTION
(A Soul Remembers)
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ONCE, in my moment of earth,
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A CONFESSION OF FAITH
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WHO would remember me were I to die,
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HEREAFTER
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IT'S Autumn-time on Salisbury Plain.
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CAMBRAI AND MARNE
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BEFORE our trenches at Cambrai
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BATTLE HYMN
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LORD God of battle and of pain,
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THE PEACEMAKER
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UPON his will he binds a radiant chain,
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