Felicia Hemans in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine Volumes 21 and 22 1827/Woman on the Field of Battle

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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 22, Pages 585-586


WOMAN ON THE FIELD OF BATTLE.

 
————Where hath not woman stood,
Strong in affection's might?—A reed, upborne
By an o'ermastering current!——


Gentle and lovely Form!
    What didst thou here,
When the fierce battle-storm
    Bore down the spear?

Banner and shiver'd crest
    Beside thee strown,
Tell, that amidst the best,
    Thy work was done.

Yet strangely, sadly fair,
    O'er the wild scene,
Gleams through its golden hair
    That brow serene.

Low lies the stately head,
    Earth-bound the free;—
How gave those haughty Dead
    A place to thee?

Slumberer! thine early bier
    Friends should have crown'd,
Many a flower and tear
    Shedding around.

Soft voices, clear and young,
    Mingling their swell,
Should o'er thy dust have sung
    Earth's last farewell.

Sisters, about the grave
    Of thy repose,
Should have bid violets wave
    With the white rose.

Now must the trumpet’s note,
    Savage and shrill,
For requiem o'er thee float,
    Thou fair and still!


And the swift charger sweep
    In full career,
Trampling thy place of sleep
    Why cam'st thou here?

Why?—Ask the true heart why
    Woman hath been
Ever, where brave men die,
    Unshrinking seen?

Unto this harvest-ground
    Proud reapers came—
Some for that stirring sound,
    A Warrior's name:

Some for the stormy play,
    And joy of strife;
And some to fling away
    A weary life.

But thou, pale Sleeper! thou
    With the slight frame,
And the rich locks, whose glow
    Death cannot tame:

Only one thought, one power,
    Thee could have led,
So through the tempest's hour
    To lift thy head!

Only the true, the strong,
    The love, whose trust
Woman's deep soul too long
    Pours on the dust.
F. H.