The Lost Battle
It is not over yet-the
Where those immortal dreamers failed.
They stormed the citadels of night,
And the night praised them-and prevailed.
So long ago the cause was
We scarce distinguish friend from foe;
But-if the dead can help it most-The armies of the dead will grow.
The world has all our banners now,
And filched our watchwords for its own.
The world has crowned the " rebel's "
And millions crowd his lordly throne.
The masks have altered.
Names are names.
They praise the "truth" that is not true.
The " rebel" that the world
Is not the rebel Shelley knew.
We may not build that Commonweal,
We may not reach the goal we set;
But there's a flag they dare not steal.
Forward! It is not over yet.
We shall be dust and under dust,
Before we end that ancient wrong;
But there's a sword that cannot rust,
And where's the death can touch a song?
So, when our bodies rot in earth,
The singing souls that once were ours,
Weaponed with light and helmed with mirth,
Shall front the kingdoms and the powers.
The ancient lie is on its throne,
And half the living still forget;
But, since the dead are all our own,
Courage, it is not over yet.
This poem was taken from Alfred Noyes' book The Elfin Artist and other poems published by William Blackwood and Sons in 1920.
JS
Alfred Noyes
Другие работы автора
The Double Fortress
Time, wouldst thou hurt us Never shall we grow old Break as thou wilt these bodies of blind clay, Thou canst not touch us here, in our stronghold, Where two, made one, laugh all thy powers away
The Old Grey Squirrel
A great while ago there was a schoolboy who lived in a cottage by the sea, And the very first thing he could rememberwas the rigging of the schooners by the quay He could watch 'em from his bedroom windowwith the big cranes a-hauling out...
The Loom of Years
In the light of the silent stars that shine on the struggling sea, In the weary cry of the wind and the whisper of flower and tree, Under the breath of laughter, deep in the tide of tears, I hear the Loom of the Weaver that weaves t...
The Trumpet Call
Trumpeter, sound for the last Crusade Sound for the fire of the red-cross kings, Sound for the passion, the splendour, the pity That swept the world for a dead Man's sake, Sound, till the answering trumpet rings Clear from the heights of...