heart that keep Him fear not
shot and flame,
(Strengthen, Jesu, all who stand, calling Thy name).
0. * *
Ye who guard a nation's call
And speed to arms therefor,
Ye who
pray for brave lads gone
To perils of the war;
Soldiers of the fleet
and fort
And mothers of our men,
In the shadow of the Cross
Shall we find peace again.
12
TO ONE IN SUCCESS
A world's new faces greet you,
Ten thousand quick with praise,
But
truer stay to meet you
Old friends and other days:
Let fickle
changes hurt you,
(The new go quick apart)
One fame shall ne'er
desert you
In true hearts like this heart.
13
THE LIFELONG WAR
Still goes the strife; the anguish does not die.
Stronger the flesh is
grown from earthy years,
In siege about my soul that upward peers
To see and hold its Good. The spirit's eye
Approves the better things;
but senses spy
The passing sweets, spurning the present fears,
And
take their moment's prize. Ah, then hot tears
Deluge my soul, and
contrite moans my cry!
Courage, my heart: bright patience to the end!
Few years remain; then
goes the warring wall
Of sensely flesh, that men will throw to earth.
So be it; so the contrite soul shall wend
A homeward way unto the
Captain's call,
Eternally to know contrition's worth.
14
LINDEN LANE
HOLY CROSS: MAY, 1917
(For Major Joseph W. O'Connor, '03)
Birds are merry and the buds
Come along with May:
Lonely is the
linden land
For lads that went today.
What calls the May of song
But the fair young spring?
Heard our
boys another tune
Sterner voices sing.
Bugles blew by land and sea,
And the tocsin drum;
See, brave
hearts go down the hill,
Shouting, "Hail, we come."
>From the towers that show the Cross,
Staunch the Flag waved out,
And the royal Purple shook
Joyous with the shout.
Heigh-ho! And a lusty cheer,
Down the linden lane:
The pine grove
looked but cannot tell
If they'll come home again.
Few may take the homeward road
When the war is done:
Where
they fall or when they come,
Hail, to the cause they won.
Till the buds and the merry birds
Come another May,
Cross and
Flag aloft shall bless
Brave lads who went today.
15
THE BOUNDARIES OF A HOUSE
Along the north a mountain crest,
A row of trees runs towards the
west;
The south is all a field for play,
For work the east has marked
a way;
The night shows all the stars above,
And the long, long day,
a mother's love.
16
ATTAINMENT
Let me go back again. There is the road,
O memory! The humble
garden lane
So young with me. Let me rebuild again
The start of
faith and hope by that abode;
Amend with morning freshness all the
code
Of youth's desire; remap my chart's demesne
With tuneful joy,
and plan a far campaign
For better marches in ambition's mode.
Ah, no, my heart! More certain now the skies
For joy abide: the cage
of tree and sod,
Horizons firm that faith and hope attain,
Far realms
of innocence in children's eyes,
And hearts harmonious with the will
of God:--
These might I miss if I were back again.
17
THE PHILOSOPHERS
The best of true philosophers
Are the children, after all,--
The
children with laughing hearts
And the serious field and ball:
They
have a bowl and bubbles,
And hours where rainbows are;
They find,
if ever the sun is hid,
In every dark a star.
But, O, the sorry men that make
The wise books of our day!
They
cannot smile athwart a cloud,
When black thoughts lead astray;
They cannot add a simple sum,
But talk like drunken men,
And shut
their eyes to keep out God
When spring comes in again.
Far simpler than the Rule of Three
Are the laws of earth and sky;
Yet fools will muddle all true thought,
And pride will have its cry;
The banners with their deadly words
Go reeling on unfurled,
And
sin and sadness march along
To the heartbreak of the world.
18
The Philosophers
But the children are the wise men,
With the clearest heart and mind;
If two and one are three, they say,
Then truth is near to find;
If
this be now that once was not,
If things must have a cause,
Then
very simple is the sum
That God is in His laws.
The world's men that are fools enough,
They will not speak that way,
But with a cloud of muddled thought
They hide the light of day;
Yet laughing words and candid truth
Abide by field and hall,
Where
the best of true philosophers
Are the children, after all.
19
PREPAREDNESS
I.
THE DRUMMER BOY
You never know when war may come,
And that is why I keep a
drum:
For if all sudden in the night
From east or west came battle fright,
And you were sound asleep in bed,
And very soon to join the dead,
You then would gladly wish my drum
Would warn you that the war
had come.
So that is why on afternoons
I tell the neighborhood my tunes:
Sometimes behind a fortress bench,
Or where the hedges make a
trench,
I beat the drum with all my might,
While people look with
awful fright,
Just as they would if war had come,
And heard the
warning of
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