Ella Wheeler Wilcox

Poems of Optimism

Published by Good Press, 2019
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4057664603869

Table of Contents


WAR
GREATER BRITAIN
BELGIUM
KNITTING
MOBILISATION
NEUTRAL
A BOOK FOR THE KING
THE MEN-MADE GODS
THE GHOSTS
THE POET’S THEME
EUROPE
AFTER
THE PEACE ANGEL
PEACE SHOULD NOT COME
MISCELLANEOUS
THE WINDS OF FATE
BEAUTY
THE INVISIBLE HELPERS
TO THE WOMEN OF AUSTRALIA
REPLIES
EARTH BOUND
A SUCCESSFUL MAN
UNSATISFIED
SEPARATION
TO THE TEACHERS OF THE YOUNG
BEAUTY MAKING
ON AVON’S BREAST I SAW A STATELY SWAN
THE LITTLE GO-CART
I AM RUNNING FORTH TO MEET YOU
MARTYRS OF PEACE
HOME
THE ETERNAL NOW
IF I WERE A MAN, A YOUNG MAN
WE MUST SEND THEM OUT TO PLAY
PROTEST
REWARD
THIS IS MY TASK
THE STATUE
BEHOLD THE EARTH
WHAT THEY SAW
HIS LAST LETTER
A DIALOGUE
A WISH
JUSTICE
AN OLD SONG
OH, POOR, SICK WORLD
PRAISE DAY
INTERLUDE
THE LAND OF THE GONE-AWAY-SOULS
THE HARP’S SONG
THE PENDULUM
AN OLD-FASHIONED TYPE
THE SWORD
LOVE AND THE SEASONS
A NAUGHTY LITTLE COMET
THE LAST DANCE
A VAGABOND MIND
MY FLOWER ROOM
MY FAITH
ARROW AND BOW
IF WE SHOULD MEET HIM
FAITH
THE SECRET OF PRAYER
THE ANSWER
A VISION
THE SECOND COMING

WAR

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GREATER BRITAIN

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Our hearts were not set on fighting,
We did not pant for the fray,
And whatever wrongs need righting,
We would not have met that way.
But the way that has opened before us
Leads on thro’ a blood-red field;
And we swear by the great God o’er us,
We will die, but we will not yield.

The battle is not of our making,
And war was never our plan;
Yet, all that is sweet forsaking,
We march to it, man by man.
It is either to smite, or be smitten,
There’s no other choice to-day;
And we live, as befits the Briton,
Or we die, as the Briton may.

We were not fashioned for cages,
Or to feed from a keeper’s hand;
Our strength which has grown thro’ ages
Is the strength of a slave-free land.
We cannot kneel down to a master,
To our God alone can we pray;
And we stand in this world disaster,
To fight, like a lion at bay.

BELGIUM

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Ruined? destroyed? Ah, no; though blood in rivers ran
Down all her ancient streets; though treasures manifold
Love-wrought, Time-mellowed, and beyond the price of gold
Are lost, yet Belgium’s star shines still in God’s vast plan.

Rarely have Kings been great, since kingdoms first began;
Rarely have great kings been great men, when all was told.
But, by the lighted torch in mailèd hands, behold,
Immortal Belgium’s immortal king, and Man.

KNITTING

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At the concert and the play
Everywhere you see them sitting,
Knitting, knitting.
Women who the other day
Thought of nothing but their frocks
Or their jewels or their locks,
Women who have lived for pleasure,
Who have known no work but leisure,
Now are knitting, knitting, knitting
For the soldiers over there.

On the trains and on the ships
With a diligence befitting,
They are knitting.
Some with smiles upon their lips,
Some with manners debonair,
Some with earnest look and air.
But each heart in its own fashion,
Weaves in pity and compassion
In their knitting, knitting, knitting
For the soldiers over there.

Hurried women to and fro
From their homes to labour flitting,
Knitting, knitting,
Busy handed come and go.
Broken bits of time they spare,
Just to feel they do their share,
Just to keep life’s sense of beauty
In the doing of a duty,
They are knitting, knitting, knitting
For the soldiers over there.

MOBILISATION

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Oh the Kings of earth have mobilised their men.
See them moving, valour proving,
To the fields of glory going,
Banners flowing, bugles blowing,
Every one a mother’s son,
Brave with uniform and gun,
Keeping step with easy swing,
Yes, with easy step and light marching onward to the fight,
Just to please the warlike fancy of a King;
Who has mobilised his army for the strife.

Oh the King of Death has mobilised his men.
See the hearses huge and black
How they rumble down the track;
With their coffins filled with dead,
Filled with men who fought and bled;
Now from fields of glory coming
To the sound of muffled drumming
They are lying still and white,
But the Kings have had their fight;
Death has mobilised his army for the grave.

NEUTRAL

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That pale word ‘Neutral’ sits becomingly
On lips of weaklings. But the men whose brains
Find fuel in their blood, the men whose minds
Hold sympathetic converse with their hearts,
Such men are never neutral. That word stands
Unsexed and impotent in Realms of Speech.
When mighty problems face a startled world
No virile man is neutral. Right or wrong
His thoughts go forth, assertive, unafraid
To stand by his convictions, and to do
Their part in shaping issues to an end.
Silence may guard the door of useless words,
At dictate of Discretion; but to stand
Without opinions in a world which needs
Constructive thinking, is a coward’s part.

A BOOK FOR THE KING

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A book has been made for the King,
A book of beauty and art;
To the good king’s eyes
A smile shall rise
Hiding the ache in his heart—
Hiding the hurt and the grief
As he turns it, leaf by leaf.

A book has been made for the King,
A book of blood and of blight;
To the Great King’s eyes
A look shall rise
That will blast and wither and smite—
Yes, smite with a just God’s rage,
As He turns it, page by page.

THE MEN-MADE GODS

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Said the Kaiser’s god to the god of the Czar:
‘Hark, hark, how my people pray.
Their faith, methinks, is greater by far
Than all the faiths of the others are;
They know I will help them slay.’

Said the god of the Czar: ‘My people call
In a medley of tongues; they know
I will lend my strength to them one and all.
Wherever they fight their foes shall fall
Like grass where the mowers go.’

Then the god of the Gauls spoke out of a cloud
To the god of the King nearby:
‘Our people pray, tho’ they pray not loud;
They ask for courage to slaughter a crowd,
And to laugh, tho’ themselves may die.’

And far out into the heart of Space
Where a lonely pathway crept,
Up over the stars, to a secret place,
Where no light shone but the light of His face,
Christ covered His eyes and wept.

THE GHOSTS

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There was no wind, and yet the air
Seemed suddenly astir;
There were no forms, and yet all space
Seemed thronged with growing hosts.
They came from Where, and from Nowhere,
Like phantoms as they were;
They came from many a land and place—
The ghosts, the ghosts, the ghosts.

And some were white, and some were grey,
And some were red as blood—
Those ghosts of men who met their death
Upon the field of war.
Against the skies of fading day,
Like banks of cloud they stood;
And each wraith asked another wraith,
‘What were we fighting for?’

One said, ‘I was my mother’s all;
And she was old and blind.’
Another, ‘Back on earth, my wife
And week-old baby lie.’
Another, ‘At the bugle’s call,
I left my bride behind;
Love made so beautiful my life
I could not bear to die.’

In voices like the winds that moan
Among pine trees at night,
They whispered long, the newly dead,
While listening stars came out.
‘We wonder if the cause is known,