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Songs
from Vagabondia
by
Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey
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THE
MARCHING MORROWS
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NOW
gird thee well for courage,
My knight of twenty year,
Against the marching morrows
That fill the world with fear!
The
flowers fade before them;
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5 |
The
summer leaves the hill;
Their trumpets range the morning,
And those who hear grow still.
Like
pillagers of harvest,
Their fame is far abroad,
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10 |
As
gray remorseless troopers
That plunder and maraud.
The
dust is on their corselets;
Their marching fills the world;
With conquest after conquest
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15 |
Their
banners are unfurled.
They
overthrow the battles
Of every lord of war,
From world-dominioned cities
Wipe out the names they bore.
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20 |
Sohrab, Rameses, Roland,
Ramoth, Napoleon, Tyre,
And the Romeward Huns of Attila—
Alas, for their desire!
By
April and by autumn
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25 |
They
perish in their pride,
And still they close and gather
Out of the mountain-side.
The
tanned and tameless children
Of the wild elder earth,
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30 |
With
stature of the northlights,
They have the stars for girth.
There's
not a hand to stay them,
Of all the hearts that brave;
No captain to undo them,
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35 |
No
cunning to off-stave.
Yet
fear thou not! If haply
Thou be the kingly one,
They'll set thee in their vanguard
To lead them round the sun.
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40 |
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