Page:The poems of Edmund Clarence Stedman, 1908.djvu/238

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POEMS OF OCCASION

That weapon when he drew,
Back rolled the wrath of men,—
Their onset feebler grew,
The Nation rose again.


The splendor and the fame—
Whisper of these alone,
Nor say that round his name
A moment's shade was thrown;


Count not each satellite
'Twixt him and glory's sun,
The circling things of night;
Number his battles won.


Where then to choose his grave?
From mountain unto sea,
The Land he fought to save
His sepulchre shall be.


Yet to its fruitful earth
His quickening ashes lend,
That chieftains may have birth,
And patriots without end.


His carven scroll shall read:
Here rests the valiant heart
Whose duty was his creed,—
Whose lot, the warrior's part.


Who, when the fight was done,
The grim last foe defied,
Naught knew save victory won,
Surrendered not—but died.

1885.


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