FOR DECORATION DAY BY RUPERT HUGHES I 1861-1865 But do we truly mourn our soldier dead, Or understand at all their precious fameWe that were born too late to feel the flame That leapt from lowly hearths, and grew, dispread, And, like a pillar of fire, our armies led ? Or you that knew them-do the long years tame The memory-anguish? Are they more than name? Oh, let no stinted grief profane their bed! Let tears bedew each wreath that decks the lawn Of every grave! and raise a solemn prayer That their battalioned souls be joined to fare Dim roads, beyond the trumpets of the dawn, Yet perfumed, somehow, by our flowers that heap The peaceful barracks where their bodies sleep. II 1898-1899 And now the long, long lines of the Nation's graves Grow longer; and the venerate slopes reveal The fresh spring turf gashed thick with tombs to seal Away another army of our braves. So hang black garlands from the architraves Of all the capitols. The dying peal Of bugles wails their final Taps. So kneel And give the dead the due their virtue craves. Thank God, the olden sinew still is bred; The Lord enlarge our spirits till we feel dread. LITTLE NAN ANONYMOUS The wide gates swung open, with flowers; With pansies, pinks, and roses, time bowers; When down the walk came tripping grave and sweet; greet. O, many smiled to see her, bound; A yellow dandelion upon each flower-strewn mound. The music died in silence, And in the fragrant stillness a birdlike whisper grew, for 'oo." A MONUMENT FOR THE SOLDIER 1 BY JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY A monument for the Soldiers ! And what will ye build it of? Outlasting the Soldiers' love? As grand as their blood hath writ To the outermost verge of it? And the answer came: We would build it Out of our hopes made sure, And out of our faith secure: Their death hath sanctified, And their faces ere they died. And what heroic figures Can the sculptor carve in stone? And the marble lips to moan? And the marble eyes be graved On the country they have saved ? 1 From “Green Fields and Running Brooks,” 1892, BobbsMerrill Co. And the answer came: The figures Shall all be fair and brave, As the stars above their grave! Whereon the laurel lies, Of the old flag in the skies ! A monument for the Soldiers ! Built of a people's love, With the hearts ye build it of! In pillar and niche and gate, It would commemorate! DECORATION DAY 1 BY RICHARD WATSON GILDER She saw the bayonets flashing in the sun, calling; 1 By permission of the publishers, Houghton, Mifflin & Co. |