Public Domain Poetry And Stories - War by Archibald Lampman
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War

    By Archibald Lampman



    By the Nile, the sacred river,
    I can see the captive hordes
    Strain beneath the lash and quiver
    At the long papyrus cords,
    While in granite rapt and solemn,
    Rising over roof and column,
    Amen-hotep dreams, or Ramses,
    Lord of Lords.

    I can hear the trumpets waken
    For a victory old and far -
    Carchemish or Kadesh taken -
    I can see the conqueror's car
    Bearing down some Hittite valley,
    Where the bowmen break and sally,
    Sargina or Esarhaddon,
    Grim with war!

    From the mountain streams that sweeten
    Indus, to the Spanish foam,
    I can feel the broad earth beaten
    By the serried tramp of Rome;
    Through whatever foes environ
    Onward with the might of iron -
    Veni, vidi; veni, vici -
    Crashing home!

    I can see the kings grow pallid
    With astonished fear and hate,
    As the hosts of Amr or Khaled
    On their cities fall like fate;
    Like the heat-wind from its prison
    In the desert burst and risen -
    La ilàha illah 'llàhu -
    God is great!

    I can hear the iron rattle,
    I can see the arrows sting
    In some far-off northern battle,
    Where the long swords sweep and swing;
    I can hear the scalds declaiming,
    I can see their eyeballs flaming,
    Gathered in a frenzied circle
    Round the king.

    I can hear the horn of Uri
    Roaring in the hills enorm;
    Kindled at its brazen fury,
    I can see the clansmen form;
    In the dawn in misty masses,
    Pouring from the silent passes
    Over Granson or Morgarten
    Like the storm.

    On the lurid anvil ringing
    To some slow fantastic plan,
    I can hear the sword-smith singing
    In the heart of old Japan -
    Till the cunning blade grows tragic
    With his malice and his magic -
    Tenka tairan! Tenka tairan!
    War to man!

    Where a northern river charges
    By a wild and moonlit glade,
    From the murky forest marges,
    Round a broken palisade,
    I can see the red men leaping,
    See the sword of Daulac sweeping,
    And the ghostly forms of heroes
    Fall and fade.

    I can feel the modern thunder
    Of the cannon beat and blaze,
    When the lines of men go under
    On your proudest battle-days;
    Through the roar I hear the lifting
    Of the bloody chorus drifting
    Round the burning mill at Valmy -
    Marseillaise!

    I can see the ocean rippled
    With the driving shot like rain,
    While the hulls are crushed and crippled,
    And the guns are piled with slain;
    O'er the blackened broad sea-meadow
    Drifts a tall and titan shadow,
    And the cannon of Trafalgar
    Startle Spain.

    Still the tides of fight are booming,
    And the barren blood is spilt;
    Still the banners are up-looming,
    And the hands are on the hilt;
    But the old world waxes wiser,
    From behind the bolted visor
    It descries at last the horror
    And the guilt.

    Yet the eyes are dim, nor wholly
    Open to the golden gleam,
    And the brute surrenders slowly
    To the godhead and the dream.
    From his cage of bar and girder,
    Still at moments mad with murder,
    Leaps the tiger, and his demon
    Rules supreme.

    One more war with fire and famine
    Gathers - I can hear its cries -
    And the years of might and Mammon
    Perish in a world's demise;
    When the strength of man is shattered,
    And the powers of earth are scattered,
    From beneath the ghastly ruin
    Peace shall rise!



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