Poems of Adam Lindsay Gordon by Adam Lindsay Gordon
page 15 of 370 (04%)
page 15 of 370 (04%)
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There is now no place for me.
Day by day our ranks diminish, We are falling day by day; But our sons the strife will finish, Where man tarries man must slay. Life, 'tis said, to all men sweet is, Death to all must bitter be; Wherefore thus, oh, mother Thetis! None can baffle Jove's decree? I am ready, I am willing, To resign my stormy life; Weary of this long blood-spilling, Sated with this ceaseless strife. Shorter doom I've pictured dimly, On a bed of crimson sand; Fighting hard and dying grimly, Silent lips, and striking hand. But the toughest lives are brittle, And the bravest and the best Lightly fall -- it matters little; Now I only long for rest. I have seen enough of slaughter, Seen Scamander's torrent red, Seen hot blood poured out like water, Seen the champaign heaped with dead. Men will call me unrelenting, Pitiless, vindictive, stern; |
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