War Poetry of the South by Various


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Page 154



IV.


The world's bright eye is fixed upon thee still;
_Life, honor, fame_--these all are in the scale:
_Endure! endure! endure!_ with iron will,
And by the truth of heaven, thou shalt not fail!

Patriot and Mountaineer.




"After the Battle."

By Miss Agnes Leonard.



I.


All day long the sun had wandered,
Through the slowly creeping hours,
And at last the stars were shining
Like some golden-petalled flowers
Scattered o'er the azure bosom
Of the glory-haunted night,
Flooding all the sky with grandeur,
Filling all the earth with light.



II.


And the fair moon, with the sweet stars,
Gleamed amid the radiant spheres
Like "a pearl of great price" shining
Just as it had shone for years,
On the young land that had risen,
In her beauty and her might,
Like some gorgeous superstructure
Woven in the dreams of night:



III.


With her "cities hung like jewels"
On her green and peaceful breast,
With her harvest fields of plenty,
And her quiet homes of rest.
But a change had fallen sadly
O'er the young and beauteous land,
Brothers on the field fought madly
That once wandered hand in hand.



IV.


And "the hearts of distant mountains
Shuddered," with a fearful wonder,
As the echoes burst upon them
Of the cannon's awful thunder.
Through the long hours waged the battle
Till the setting of the sun
Dropped a seal upon the record,
That the day's mad work was done.



V.


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Books | Photos | Paul Mutton | Wed 14th Jan 2026, 7:02