Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
Poems of Tragedy: VIII. FranceBefore Sedan
Henry Austin Dobson (18401921)H
Quiet he lies,
Cold, with his sightless face
Turned to the skies;
’T is but another dead;—
All you can say is said.
Kings must have slaves;
Kings climb to eminence
Over men’s graves.
So this man’s eye is dim;—
Throw the earth over him.
There at his side?
Paper his hand had clutched
Tight ere he died;
Message or wish, may be:—
Smooth out the folds and see.
Here could have smiled!—
Only the tremulous
Words of a child:—
Prattle, that had for stops
Just a few ruddy drops.
Morning and night,
His—her dead father’s—kiss,
Tries to be bright,
Good to mamma, and sweet.
That is all. “Marguerite.”
Slumbered the pain!
Ah, if the hearts that bled
Slept with the slain!
If the grief died!—But no:—
Death will not have it so.