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Custer.
Foiled on the field with his dead boys around him,All waiting for Earth to recover her own,Fortune hath missed him, but Glory hath found him,While fighting a thousand fierce foemen alone.Custer's the right wing, the left and the center,Himself is his only reserve and supply.This is a battle for Spartans to enter,Where One makes an army to conquer or die.Straight on his steed doth he meet the grim battle,The red line of danger grows deadly and large,Loud from the hills rings the rifleman's rattle,But Custer is ready, so forward and charge!Firing with left hand, and fencing with right,The reins in his teeth, like a handless young Hun,What is his fate in the terrible fight?The thousands hath slain him, yet Custer hath won.H...
A. H. Laidlaw
For Valour
Hail to you, comrades, who have won,Where the torn lines of battle runBy tattered town and ruined mead,The honour that men give with prideTo those who, daffing death aside,Have done the valorous deed.And has the war, then, brought to birth,As flowers that spring from western earthAt summons of the pelting rain,The courage that can force its way,And hold the shadowing wings at bay,And smile at lingering pain?And is it true that only nowLife lifts from her heroic browThe smothering shroud of deadly peace,And laughs to sniff the morning air,And bids a thousand bonfires flareThe news of her release?Hells throat may swallow down its lie,For men knew how to live and dieAnd take the gifts of motley fate,
John Le Gay Brereton
As I gird on for fighting
As I gird on for fightingMy sword upon my thigh,I think on old ill fortunesOf better men than I.Think I, the round world over,What golden lads are lowWith hurts not mine to mourn forAnd shames I shall not know.What evil luck soeverFor me remains in store,Tis sure much finer fellowsHave fared much worse before.So here are things to think onThat ought to make me brave,As I strap on for fightingMy sword that will not save.
Alfred Edward Housman
A Rallying Cry.
Oh, children of the tropics, Amid our pain and wrongHave you no other mission Than music, dance, and song?When through the weary ages Our dripping tears still fall,Is this a time to dally With pleasure's silken thrall?Go, muffle all your viols; As heroes learn to stand,With faith in God's great justice Nerve every heart and hand.Dream not of ease nor pleasure, Nor honor, wealth, nor fame,Till from the dust you've lifted Our long-dishonored name;And crowned that name with glory By deeds of holy worth,To shine with light emblazoned, The noblest name on earth.Count life a dismal failure, Unblessing and unblest,That seeks 'mid ease inglorious ...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Hope
Faith may break on reason,Faith may prove a treasonTo that highest giftThat is granted by Thy grace;But Hope! Ah, let us cherishSome spark that may not perish,Some tiny spark to cheer us,As we wander through the waste!A little lamp beside us,A little lamp to guide us,Where the path is rocky,Where the road is steep.That when the light falls dimmer,Still some God-sent glimmerMay hold us steadfast ever,To the track that we should keep.Hope for the trending of it,Hope for the ending of it,Hope for all around us,That it ripens in the sun.Hope for what is waning,Hope for what is gaining,Hope for what is waitingWhen the long day is done.Hope that He, the nameless,May still b...
Arthur Conan Doyle
The Crisis
A man of low degree was sore oppressed,Fate held him under iron-handed sway,And ever, those who saw him thus distressedWould bid him bend his stubborn will and pray.But he, strong in himself and obdurate,Waged, prayerless, on his losing fight with Fate.Friends gave his proffered hand their coldest clasp,Or took it not at all; and Poverty,That bruised his body with relentless grasp,Grinned, taunting, when he struggled to be free.But though with helpless hands he beat the air,His need extreme yet found no voice in prayer.Then he prevailed; and forthwith snobbish Fate,Like some whipped cur, came fawning at his feet;Those who had scorned forgave and called him great--His friends found out that friendship still was sweet.But he, once obd...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Let Honour Speak
Let Honour speak, for only Honour canEnd nobly what in nobleness began.Nor hate nor anger may, though just their cause,This strife prolong, if Honour whisper, Pause!Let Honour speak.For Honour keeps the ashes of the dead,Accounts the anguish of all widowhead,All childlessness, all sacrifice, defeat,And all our dead have died for, though to live was sweet.Let Honour speak,Nor weariness nor weakness murmur, Stay!Nor for this Now England's To be betray.All else be dumb, for only Honour canEnd nobly what in nobleness began.
John Frederick Freeman
Encouragement.
To help our tired hope to toil,Lo! have we not the council hereOf trees, that to all hope appearAs sermons of the soil?To help our flagging faith to rise,Lo! have we not the high adviceOf stars, that for all faith sufficeAs gospels of the skies?Sustain us, Lord! and help us climb,With hope and faith made strong and great,The rock-rough pathway of our fate,The care-dark way of time!
Madison Julius Cawein
Within the world of every man's desireTwo things have power to lift the soul above:The first is Work, who dons a mean attire;The other, Love, whose raiment is of fire.Their child is Hope, and we the heirs thereof.
Lively Hope And Gracious Fear.
I was a grovelling creature once,And basely cleaved to earth;I wanted spirit to renounceThe clod that gave me birth.But God has breathed upon a worm,And sent me, from above,Wings such as clothe an angels form,The wings of joy and love.With these to Pisgahs top I fly,And there delighted stand,To view beneath a shining skyThe spacious promised land.The Lord of all the vast domainHas promised it to me;The length and breadth of all the plain,As far as faith can see.How glorious is my privilege!To thee for help I call;I stand upon a mountains edge,Oh save me, lest I fall!Though much exalted in the Lord,My strength is not my own;Then let me tremble at h...
William Cowper
Power of Love
Love, indeed thy strength is mightyThus, alone, such strife to bear,Three 'gainst one, and never ceasing,Death, and Madness, and Despair!'Tis not my own strength has saved me;Health, and hope, and fortitude,But for love, had long since failed me;Heart and soul had sunk subdued.Often, in my wild impatience,I have lost my trust in Heaven,And my soul has tossed and struggled,Like a vessel tempest-driven;But the voice of my belovedIn my ear has seemed to say,'O, be patient if thou lov'st me!'And the storm has passed away.When outworn with weary thinking,Sight and thought were waxing dim,And my mind began to wander,And my brain began to swim,Then those hands outstretched to save meSeemed to...
Anne Bronte
Conquest
Talk not of strength, until your heart has knownAnd fought with weakness through long hours alone.Talk not of virtue, till your conquering soulHas met temptation and gained full control.Boast not of garments, all unscorched by sin,Till you have passed, unscathed, through fires within.Oh, poor that pride the unscarred soldier shows,Who safe in camp, has never faced his foes.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To William Lloyd Garrison
Champion of those who groan beneathOppression's iron hand:In view of penury, hate, and death,I see thee fearless stand.Still bearing up thy lofty brow,In the steadfast strength of truth,In manhood sealing well the vowAnd promise of thy youth.Go on, for thou hast chosen well;On in the strength of God!Long as one human heart shall swellBeneath the tyrant's rod.Speak in a slumbering nation's ear,As thou hast ever spoken,Until the dead in sin shall hear,The fetter's link be broken!I love thee with a brother's love,I feel my pulses thrill,To mark thy Spirit soar aboveThe cloud of human ill.My heart hath leaped to answer thine,And echo back thy words,As leaps the warrior's at the shineAnd flash of kindred swo...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Two Adventurers And The Talisman.
[1]No flowery path to glory leads.This truth no better voucher needsThan Hercules, of mighty deeds.Few demigods, the tomes of fableReveal to us as being ableSuch weight of task-work to endure:In history, I find still fewer.One such, however, here behold -A knight by talisman made bold,Within the regions of romance,To seek adventures with the lance.There rode a comrade at his ride,And as they rode they both espiedThis writing on a post: -"Wouldst see, sir valiant knight,A thing whereof the sightNo errant yet can boast?Thou hast this torrent but to ford,And, lifting up, alone,The elephant of stoneUpon its margin shored,Upbear it to the mountain's brow,Round which, aloft before thee now,
Jean de La Fontaine
The Trial By Bxistence
Even the bravest that are slainShall not dissemble their surpriseOn waking to find valor reign,Even as on earth, in paradise;And where they sought without the swordWide fields of asphodel fore'er,To find that the utmost rewardOf daring should be still to dare.The light of heaven falls whole and whiteAnd is not shattered into dyes,The light forever is morning light;The hills are verdured pasture-wise;The angle hosts with freshness go,And seek with laughter what to brave;And binding all is the hushed snowOf the far-distant breaking wave.And from a cliff-top is proclaimedThe gathering of the souls for birth,The trial by existence named,The obscuration upon earth.And the slant spirits trooping byIn streams ...
Robert Lee Frost
At A Time Of Deep Proving.
Poor throbbing heart! the battle wave of lifeBeats strong against thee, yet thou strugglest on,Breasting the mighty billows, though no kind, well-known voice,When the great mountain wave threatens to o'erwhelm,Whispers the soul-reviving words, "Be of good cheer,The port is nearing fast!" Instead of thisIs heard the mournful moan of the discourager,Portending peril, shipwreck, loss of all.But ah! poor struggling heart!An eye is over thee, a Father's eye,Of tender love and pity. There is ONEWhose voice is mightier than the noiseOf many waters, who sitteth on the floodAnd reigneth King forever.He sees thee breast the wave, upheld aloneBy childlike trust and confidence in Him,And through the storm is heard His gentle tone,"Daughter, be comfor...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
The Spirit's Salute.
The hero's noble shade stands highOn yonder turret grey;And as the ship is sailing by,He speeds it on his way."See with what strength these sinews thrill'd!This heart, how firm and wild!These bones, what knightly marrow fill'd!This cup, how bright it smil'd!"Half of my life I strove and fought,And half I calmly pass'd;And thou, oh ship with beings fraught,Sail safely to the last!"
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
A Hero.
The warrior knows how fitful is the fight, - How sad to live, - how sweet perchance to die. Is Fame his joy? He meets her on the height, And when he falls he shouts his battle-cry; His eyes are wet; our own will not be dry. Nor shall we stint his praise, or our delight, When he survives to serve his Land aright And make his fame the watchword of the sky. In all our hopes his love is with us still; He tends our faith, he soothes us when we grieve. His acts are just; his word we must believe, And none shall spurn him, though his blood they spill To pierce the heart whose pride they cannot kill. - Death dies for him whose fame is his reprieve!
Eric Mackay