Great Poems of the World War

Part 11

Chapter 112,943 wordsPublic domain

Nameless--and yet how gallantly he faced the roaring thunder Where names were less than star-dust as the crashing steel swept by To take its endless toll of those the night squad spaded under, Clod upon clod, beneath the sod that time alone may sunder, Held where the wind-blown grasses stir beneath an alien sky.

He’ll miss, perhaps, the poppy blooms that sway above the clover, But rose-red wreaths of Arlington bend low above his dreams. The reveille at dawn is done, the slogging hikes are over, Where out the friendly lanes of home, a gay and careless rover, His wild, free spirit seeks the hills and haunts the singing streams.

No more he moves by Meuse or Aisne, some shell-swept river wading, No marching orders call him from his rough-hewn granite grave. And when at dusk we hear far off the eerie drum-taps fading, What hallowed spot holds more than this, with spectral lines parading Blood of our blood, dust of our dust, “the ashes of our brave”?

There will be tears from watching eyes, where rain and mist are blended, There will be heartache in the lines where gold-starred mothers wait. But where the great shells fall no more, what vision is more splendid Than peace along the once-scarred fields, the last red battle ended, Peace that he helped to bring again above the twilight gate?

Let valor’s minstrel voices sing his fame for future pages, But when the starless darkness comes and the long silence creeps, When blossom mists of spring return or winter torrent rages, Write this above his nameless dust, to last beyond the ages, “Safe in the Mighty Mother’s arms an Unknown Soldier sleeps.”

EPITAPH FOR THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER

ANNETTE KOHN

IN THE WASHINGTON STAR

Permission to reproduce in this book

Within this nation-hallowed tomb An unknown soldier lies asleep, Symbolic comrade of all those Who, on the land, on sea, in air, In that red death across the seas, Sealed with their blood the sacred truths For which our country ever stands: That righteousness is all the law-- That justice is true government-- Man’s liberty the gift of God. In memory of the faith they kept, Here through the ages all the land As honor guard on watch will stand!

INDEX OF FIRST LINES

Above the broken walls the apple boughs, 181

Absolute knowledge I have none, 86

Across the sands by Mary’s well, 47

Against the shabby house I pass each day, 111

A little grimy-fingered girl, 43

Archduke Francis Ferdinand, Austrian heir-apparent, 137

A thousand whistles break the bonds of sleep, 198

Athwart that land of bloss’ming vine, 65

Black with the blackness of hell and despair, 196

Bosun’s whistle piping, “Starboard watch is on”;, 18

Boy in khaki, boy in blue, 82

By all the glories of the day, 13

By blazing homes, through forests torn, 70

Click, click! how the needles go, 128

Come! Says the drum, 67

Come shake hands, my little peach blossom, 76

Dear little flag in the window there, 154

Down in the street, with a lilting swing, 108

Down toward the deep-blue water, marching to throb of drum, 112

“Do your bit!” How cheap and trite, 152

’E’s a sportsman is our Padre, 36

Far and near, high and clear, 106

Flag of our Faith: lead on--, 40

Float thou majestically, proudly, triumphantly, 153

Franceline rose in the dawning gray, 139

God, the Master Pilot, 68

Gone is the spire that slept for centuries, 92

Hail and farewell, 126

Hail, banner of our holy faith, 45

Hear the guns, hear the guns!, 134

He profits most who serves us best!, 179

Here in the long white ward I stand, 14

Here’s to the Blue of the wind-swept North, 41

He was a French Boy Scout--a little lad, 83

He woke: the clank and racket of the train, 121

His regiment came home today, 192

Ho! Heimdal sounds the Gjallar-horn:, 21

I can count my francs an’ santeems, 186

I enlisted in the infantry last summer;, 141

If I should die, think only this of me:, 102

I have a conversation book; I brought it out from home, 19

I have a rendezvous with Death, 99

I hear the throbbing music down the lanes of Afric rain:, 42

I knit, I knit, I pray, I pray, 185

I never would ’ave done it if I’d known what it would be, 187

In Flanders’ fields the poppies blow, 101

In Flanders fields, where poppies blow, 195

In this last hour, before the bugles blare, 120

I saw the spires of Oxford, 114

I sit down to write a poem of our fighting men’s renown, 169

I stand on a peak at Verdun--a scarred, torn peak of hope and death, 167

It is long since knighthood was in flower, 85

It is portentous, and a thing of state, 144

I tried to be a doughboy, but they said my feet were flat, 143

It’s a high-falutin’ title they have handed us;, 44

It’s Spring at home; I know the signs--, 123

It was high midsummer and the sun was shining strong, 34

It was only a little river; almost a brook;, 159

It was thick with Prussian troopers, it was foul with German guns, 29

I’ve heard a half a dozen times, 113

I was an exile from my own country, 93

I wonder what the trees will say, 118

Just for a “scrap of paper,”, 24

Leave me alone here, proudly, with my dead, 132

Left! Left! Had a good girl when I Left! Left, 71

Let us praise God for the Dead: the Dead who died in our cause, 119

’Mid blinding rain this inky night, 74

Mike Dillon was a doughboy, 61

My heart is numb with sorrow;, 51

My house that I so soon shall own, 110

My name is Danny Bloomer and my age is eighty-three, 75

My son, at last the fateful day has come, 87

Never a Serbian flower shall bloom, 50

No beauty could escape his loving eyes, 14

No bugle is blown, no roll of drums, 86

No Man’s Land is an eerie sight, 16

Not with vain tears, when we’re beyond the sun, 102

Now, Mr. Wall of Wall St., he built himself a yacht, 89

O guns, fall silent till the dead men hear, 109

Oh, Carranza sent a cable-(on the kaiser’s birthday) gram, 176

Oh, Land of Ours, hear the song we make for you--, 161

Oh, the General with his epaulets, leadin’ a parade;, 37

Oh ye whose hearts are resonant, and ring to War’s romance, 146

One star for all she had, 116

On law and love and mercy, 178

On the battlefields of Flanders men have blessed you in their pain, 69

Orchard land! Orchard land!, 189

Our little hour--how swift it flies--, 103

Out here the dogs of war run loose, 184

Out in that vague vast “somewhere” of The Line, 199

Out of the night it leaped the seas, 191

Outside the ancient city’s gate, 48

Over thousands of miles, 53

Pardon! he has no Engleesh, heem, 73

Past the marching men, where the great road runs, 162

Perched upon an office stool, neatly adding figures, 94

Poppies in the wheat fields on the pleasant hills of France, 25

Ribbons of white in the flag of our land, 105

Saint Genevieve, whose sleepless watch, 20

Say, pa! What is a service flag?, 158

She stands alone beside the gate, 157

She wasn’t much to brag about, she wasn’t much to see, 30

Some day the fields of Flanders shall bloom in peace again, 129

Somewhere is music from the linnets’ bills, 104

Song of the west wind whispering--listen, 163

Son o’ ol’ Miz McAuliffe, the widder o’ Box-Car Jack, 155

Standin’ up here on the fire-step, 80

Still breaks the Holy morn, to soothe the care, 117

Straight thinking, Straight talking, 57

Suddenly one day the last ill shall fall away, 151

Summer comes and summer goes, 72

Thank God, our liberating lance, 46

The band is on the quarter-deck, the starry flag unfurled;, 166

The Colonel has a job to do, 32

The dull gray paint of war, 183

The evening star a child espied, 81

The herdman wandering by the lonely rills, 27

The Kid has gone to the Colors, 23

The Kings are dying! In blood and flame, 145

The little home paper comes to me, 15

The magpies in Picardy, 130

The mist hangs low and quiet on a ragged line of hills, 182

The nightingales of Flanders, 50

The old flag is a-doin’ her very level best, 151

The Old Gang on the Corner! What an arrant tribe they were, 64

The outfield is a-creepin’ in to catch the kaiser’s pop, 177

The rivers of France are ten score and twain, 79

The sick man said: “I pray I shall not die, 133

The soldier boys are marching, are marching past my door;, 78

The star upon their service flag has changed to gleaming gold:, 17

The sunny streets of Oxford, 115

The war is over, over there, 197

The wind today is full of ghosts with ghostly bugles blowing, 200

There are some that go for love of a fight, 96

There is a hill in England, 60

There’s a military band that plays, on Sunday afternoons, 63

There’s a rumble an’ a jumble an’ a humpin’ an’ a thud, 26

There used to be a boy next door, 172

There will be dreams again! The grass will spread, 171

They dug no grave for our soldier lad, who fought and who died out there:, 136

They knew they were fighting our war. As the months grew to years, 52

They shall not pass, While Britain’s sons draw breath, 125

They shall return when the wars are over, 179

They’ve put us through our paces;, 69

This is the song of the Plane--, 190

Thou art no longer here, 90

Through the dark night and the fury of battle, 84

’Tis a green isle set in a silver water, 180

Trotting the roan horse, 170

Twenty years of the army, of drawing a sergeant’s pay, 38

Unfurl the flag of Freedom, 98

Up among the chimneys tall, 49

Was there ever a game we did not share, 91

We had forgotten You, or very nearly--, 55

We never were made to be seen on parade, 66

We often sit upon the porch on sultry August nights, 59

West to the hills, the long, long trail that strikes, 123

We whom the draft rejected, 160

What are we fighting for, men of my race, 165

When I return, let us be very still, 33

When the shells are bursting round, 174

Who was it, picked from civil life, 127

Why do we love our flag? Ask why flowers love the sunshine, 173

Within this nation-hallowed tomb, 202

Write us your verse, oh, soldier, tell us the grim, red tale, 193

Yes, back at home I used to drive a tram;, 97

You’re a funny fellow, poilu, in your dinky little cap, 95

You see that young kid lying there, 124

“You’ve heard a good deal of the telephone wires”, 57

Readings and Monologues à la Mode

By WALTER BEN HARE

Thirty-two platform selections in prose and verse, ranging from humor to pathos, and affording an excellent repertoire for the versatile entertainer.

CONTENTS.--Amateur Gum Chewer; American Eagle; Am I Your Vife? At the Soda Fountain; Betty at the Baseball Game; Billy Keeps a Secret; Black Blue-Grass Widow; Bridget’s Disappointments; Brudder Rastus’ Sermon on the World War; Cullud Lady at the Phone; Free Years Old; Glory Car; Hallowe’en Witch; High School Tact; How to Get Married; Humoresque; Kid’s Complaint; Lodge Goat; Men Who Died; Minnie at the Skating Rink; Mrs. Santa Claus; Newlyweds; Practisin’; Sin of Steve Audaine; S-m-i-l-e; Sonny Meets the Smiths; Traumerei; Turkey in the Straw; When I’m All Dressed Up; Willie, the Angelic Child.

Beautiful cloth binding, lettering and design in two colors, attractive type.

Price, $1.25

T. S. Denison & Company, Publishers

623 S. Wabash Ave. CHICAGO

Some Vaudeville Monologues

By HARRY L. NEWTON

Right up to the minute and covers a wide range of characters. Thirteen for men and five for women.

CONTENTS.--“People I Have Met”--_Cholly has a perfect batting average in the laugh league_. “Well, I Swan!”--_Reuben’s impressions of a big city_. “Her Busted Romances”--_a muchly jilted maiden of uncertain age_. “Music à la Carte”--_Bobby explains the situation without orchestral aid_. “Abie Cohen’s Wedding Day”--_a ready conversationalist when his hands are free_. “Sorrows of Sadie”--_a chorus girl confides to a sympathetic companion_. “Tipperary Tips”--_Barney prescribes a laugh tonic_. “Kissing as an Art”--_efficiency is his middle name_. “Panhandle Pete”--_he hands out a piece of free advice_. “Tillie Olson’s Romance”--_a Swedish queen of the kitchen_. “As Tony Tells It”--_he has an imported dialect--try it on your vocabulary_. “Suffragette Susie”--_who might be willing to change her name and pay the parson as well_. “A Sad Lover”--_elucidations of a colored Romeo_. “Chatter”--_Nat has a jitney income, a limousine appetite and a six cylinder conversation_. “My Father Says”--_Elisabeth does a bit of advertising_. “I’m a Tellin’ You”--_a small town guy distributes some village information_. “The Precinct Politician”--_as a political speech maker he is a good plumber_. “Yon Yonson, Yanitor”--_he turns on the steam_. Unique illustrations of each character.

Beautiful cloth binding, lettering and design in two colors, attractive type.

Price, $1.25

T. S. Denison & Company, Publishers

623 S. Wabash Ave. CHICAGO

Let’s Pretend

A Book of Children’s Plays

By LINDSEY BARBEE

“Come--let’s pretend!” has been the slogan of all childhood. A few gay feathers have transformed an everyday lad into a savage warrior; a sweeping train has given a simple gingham frock the dignity of a court robe; the power of make-believe has changed a bare attic into a gloomy forest or perhaps into a royal palace. These six plays will appeal to the imagination, to the fun-loving nature and to the best ideals of all children.

CONTENTS.--The Little Pink Lady (6 Girls); The Ever-Ever Land (16 Boys, 17 Girls); When the Toys Awake (15 Boys, 5 Girls); The Forest of Every Day (5 Boys, 7 Girls); A Christmas Tree Joke (7 Boys, 7 Girls); “If Don’t-Believe Is Changed Into Believe” (21 Boys, 15 Girls). Full descriptions for producing; easy to costume and “put on.” Clever illustrations showing the appearance of each character. The most charming children’s plays ever written.

Beautiful cloth binding, lettering and design in two colors, attractive type.

Price, $1.25

T. S. Denison & Company, Publishers

623 S. Wabash Ave. CHICAGO

Jolly Monologues

By MARY MONCURE PARKER

Another superb group of readings by the author of “Merry Monologues.” The twenty-eight original selections in prose and verse will prove gems for any platform artist. Many moods and shades of sentiment are represented, but the majority are humorous. The original work of this author is in increasing demand.

CONTENTS.--At the Bridge Party; A Free Lunch; You Have the Same Old Smile; Signs of Spring; Mr. Daniel and the Lions; At the Telephone; You’s Mah Lil’ Coal Black Baby; The Ghost of Annie Flanigan; The Club Luncheon; The New Baby; The Kisses of Life; What George Thinks of the Movies; Isn’t Art Absorbing; Her Valentine; Maggie McCarty Talks About Receptions; Hiram and the Bolshevists; Jimmy’s Prayer; What Mary Thinks of Boys; From the Street Car Conductor’s Point of View; The Eater; The Peach Blossom Princess; One Minute to Eat; A Chop Suey Love Tale; Converting John the “Blaptist”; To Him That Overcometh; When We Went In; Who Says Woman’s Place Is at Home? Red Charley--One Credit.

Beautiful cloth binding, lettering and design in two colors, attractive type.

Price, $1.25

T. S. Denison & Company, Publishers

623 S. Wabash Ave. CHICAGO

Merry Monologues

By MARY MONCURE PARKER

These selections are wholly original and sufficiently varied in character and sentiment to enable the reader to make up a well-rounded program in which high comedy mingles with farce and pathos in a manner suitable for all occasions. Nineteen monologues and nine short poems which are especially adapted to that particular form of entertainment called the pianologue, viz., reading to music.

Some of the selections are new but most of them are the pick from the author’s wide repertoire, which she has used throughout this country and in England. They bear the stamp of enthusiastic public approval and are now first offered to the public.

=Contents:= On the Street Car; The Renaissance of the Kiss; Husbands Is Husbands; Oh, Friend of Mine; George’s First Sweetheart; Bobby and the New Baby; Lucile Gets Ready for a Dance; Mandy’s Man and Safety First; Maggie McCarthy Goes on a Diet; Mrs. Climber Doesn’t Like Notoriety; Lucindy Jones Expects a Legacy; Grown Folks Is so Awful Queer; At the Movies; The Gingie Boy; Ode to a Manikin; Isaacstein’s Busy Day; Like Pilgrims to the Appointed Place; Mrs. Bargain Counter Meets a Friend; Mother Mine; Maggie McCarthy Has Her Fortune Told; In Vaudeville; Uncle Jim and the Liniment; The Funny Story; In the Milliner Shop; Mrs. Trubble’s Troubles; George’s Cousin Willie; When Lucindy Goes to Town; A Question.

Beautiful cloth binding, lettering and design in two colors, clear, attractive type.

Price, $1.25

T. S. Denison & Company, Publishers

623 S. Wabash Ave. CHICAGO

FOOTNOTES:

[1] From “Poems,” by Alan Seeger. Copyright, 1916, by Charles Scribner’s Sons, Publishers, New York. Permission to reproduce in this book.

[2] “The Soldier,” and “Not With Vain Tears” are from “The Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke,” published and copyright, 1915, by John Lane Company, New York. Special permission to reproduce in this book.

End of Project Gutenberg's Great Poems of the World War, by W. D. Eaton