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1834–1863

THE BATTLE-FIELD.

Helen Mar Johnson

Strewn on the battle-plain, After the fight was done, And the bloody victory won, Were a thousand heaps of slain.

Rider and horse there lay, But the war-steed neighed no more, And the gallant form he bore Upon that eventful day,

Shattered, and marred, and ghastly pale, Had fallen beneath the deadly hail. Prince and peasant were there! Rich and poor, master and slave,

Wise and simple, timid and brave; Old men with snow-white hair, Young men of noble birth, Boys just from their native shore,

And the homes they shall see no more, Stretched on the cold, damp earth; And mother and sister may watch in vain, They never shall press those lips again.

Clasped in a fond embrace Was a young and gentle pair, And the love that was pictured there Made holy that dreadful place.

Near by a chieftain bled, While his faithful dog still kept A mournful watch where he slept, And mourned above the dead,

Then gazed on the pallid lips and brow: It is death — does he comprehend it now? Just as they fell they lay — Struck down in the dreadful strife;

And the latest look they wore in life Death had not taken away: Some with a pleasant smile, Foeman with foemen at peace,

Croat, and Frank, and Tyrolese, All in one ghastly pile, From the Seine, the Po, and the Land of Song, Oh, where were the souls of that countless throng?

Gone to the bar of God! Gone from the battle's din, Gone with their weight of sin, To the solemn bar of God!

Woe to ambition and pride! Woe to the tyrant king Who dares from his subjects wring What God has never denied!

Aye, woe to him, for the record stands, And the blood of the slain is on his hands.

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THE BATTLE-FIELD. · Helen Mar Johnson · Poetry Cove