Robert W. Service. Robert W. Service

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      And the dogs are leaping madly, and the wife is singing gladly,

      And I’ll rest in Athabaska, and I’ll leave it nevermore.

      Pilgrims

      For, oh, when the war will be over

      We’ll go and we’ll look for our dead;

      We’ll go when the bee’s on the clover,

      And the plume of the poppy is red:

      We’ll go when the year’s at its gayest,

      When meadows are laughing with flow’rs;

      And there where the crosses are greyest,

      We’ll seek for the cross that is ours.

      For they cry to us: Friends, we are lonely,

      A-weary the night and the day;

      But come in the blossom-time only,

      Come when our graves will be gay:

      When daffodils all are a-blowing,

      And larks are a-thrilling the skies,

      Oh, come with the hearts of you glowing,

      And the joy of the Spring in your eyes.

      But never, oh, never come sighing,

      For ours was the Splendid Release;

      And oh, but ’twas joy in the dying

      To know we were winning you Peace!

      So come when the valleys are sheening,

      And fledged with the promise of grain;

      And here where our graves will be greening,

      Just smile and be happy again.

      And so, when the war will be over,

      We’ll seek for the Wonderful One;

      And maiden will look for her lover,

      And mother will look for her son;

      And there will be end to our grieving,

      And gladness will gleam over loss,

      As — glory beyond all believing!

      We point … to a name on a cross.

      The Stretcher-Bearer

      My stretcher is one scarlet stain,

      And as I tries to scrape it clean,

      I tell you wot — I’m sick with pain

      For all I’ve ’eard, for all I’ve seen;

      Around me is the ’ellish night,

      And as the war’s red rim I trace,

      I wonder if in ’Eaven’s height,

      Our God don’t turn away ’Is face.

      I don’t care ’oose the Crime may be;

      I ’olds no brief for kin or clan;

      I ’ymns no ’ate: I only see

      As man destroys his brother man;

      I waves no flag: I only know,

      As ’ere beside the dead I wait,

      A million ’earts is weighed with woe,

      A million ’omes is desolate.

      In drippin’ darkness, far and near,

      All night I’ve sought them woeful ones.

      Dawn shudders up and still I ’ear

      The crimson chorus of the guns.

      Look! like a ball of blood the sun

      ’Angs o’er the scene of wrath and wrong.…

      “Quick! Stretcher-bearers on the run!”

      O Prince of Peace! ’Ow long, ’ow long?

      The Song of the Pacifist

      What do they matter, our headlong hates, when we take the toll of our Dead?

      Think ye our glory and gain will pay for the torrent of blood we have shed?

      By the cheers of our Victory will the heart of the mother be comforted?

      If by the Victory all we mean is a broken and brooding foe;

      Is the pomp and power of a glitt’ring hour, and a truce for an age or so:

      By the clay cold hand on the broken blade we have smitten a bootless blow!

      If by the Triumph we only prove that the sword we sheathe is bright;

      That justice and truth and love endure; that freedom’s throned on the height;

      That the feebler folks shall be unafraid; that Might shall never be Right;

      If this be all: by blood-drenched plains, by the havoc of fire and fear,

      By the rending roar of the War of Wars, by the Dead so doubly dear.…

      Then our Victory is a vast defeat, and it mocks us as we cheer.

      Victory! there can be but one, hallowed in every land:

      When by the graves of our common dead we who were foemen stand;

      And in the hush of our common grief hand is tendered to hand.

      Triumph! Yes, when out of the dust in the splendour of their release

      The spirits of those who fell go forth and they hallow our hearts to peace,

      And, brothers in pain, with worldwide voice, we clamour that War shall cease.

      Glory! Ay, when from blackest loss shall be born most radiant gain;

      When over the gory fields shall rise a star that never shall wane:

      Then, and then only, our Dead shall know that they have not fall’n in vain.

      When our children’s children shall talk of War as a madness that may not be;

      When we thank our God for our grief today, and blazon from sea to sea

      In

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