Christmas, 1918

The many messages she writes,

He chuckles o'er the closing line.

She's failed his secret to divine—

"When you get home," she tells the lad,

"You'll scarcely know your doting dad;

Although his hair is turning gray,

He seems more like a boy each day."

They give their all, this Christmastide, that peace on earth shall reign;

Upon the snows of Flanders now, brave blood has left its stain;

With ribbons red we deck our gifts; theirs bear the red of pain.

They give their lives that joy shall live and little children play;

They pass that all that makes for peace shall not be swept away;

They die that children yet unborn shall have their Christmas Day.

Come! deck the home with holly wreaths and make this Christmas glow,

And let Old Glory wave above the bough of mistletoe!

Come! keep alive the faith of them who sleep 'neath Flanders snow.

Ye brave of heart who dwell at home, make merry now a-while;

The world has need of Christmas cheer its sorrows to beguile;

And blest is he whose love can light grief's corners with a smile.

Ring out once more, sweet Christmas bells, your message to the sky,

Proclaim in golden tones again to every passer-by

That peace shall rule the lands of earth, and only war shall die.

Let love's sweet tenderness relieve war's cruel crimson clutch,

Send forth the Christmas spirit, every troubled heart to touch;

Blest will be all we do for them who do for us so much.

Come you with dangers to fright us? or hazards

to try out our souls?

Then may you find us undaunted; determined to

get to our goals.

Now, white are the pages you bring us to fill

with the tales of our deeds,

And I pray we shall square at the finish the work

of our lives with our creeds.

Oh, child of a year, do you wonder what here

upon earth you shall find?

America shows you a people united in purpose

and mind;

Whatever you bring us of danger, whatever you

hold to affright,

I pray that we never shall lower our standards

of truth and of right.

You find us a people united, full pledged to the

work of the world,

To banish the despot and tyrant, our banner in

battle's unfurled;

And here to a world that is bleeding and weary

and heartsick you come,

Whatever you've brought us of duty—we'll

answer the call of your drum.

We may weep in our grief and our sorrows, we

may bend 'neath the might of the blow,

But never our courage shall falter, and never

we'll run from the foe.

We know not how troubled our pathways shall

be nor how sorely beset,

But I pray we shall cling to our honor as men

and never our purpose forget.

Less hate and greed

Is what we need

And more of service true;

More men to love

The flag above

And keep it first in view.

Less boast and brag

About the flag,

More faith in what it means;

More heads erect,

More self-respect,

Less talk of war machines.

The time to fight

To keep it bright

Is not along the way,

Nor 'cross the foam,

But here at home

Within ourselves—to-day.

'Tis we must love

That flag above

With all our might and main;

For from our hands—

Not distant lands—

Shall come dishonor's stain.

If that flag be

Dishonored, we

Have done it—-not the foe;

If it shall fall,

We, first of all,

Shall have to strike the blow.

The men are talking peace at 'ome, but 'ere we're talking fight,

There's many a little debt we've got to square;

A sniper sent a bullet through my bunkie's 'ead last night,

And 'is body's lying somewhere h'over there.

Oh, we 'ear a lot of rumors that the war is h'almost through

But Hi'm thinking that it's only arf begun;

Every soldier in the trenches has a little debt that's due

And Hi'm telling you it's not a money one.

We 'ave 'eard the bullets whistle and we've 'card the shrapnel sing

And we've listened to a dying comrade's pleas,

And we've 'eard about the comfort that the days of peace will bring,

But we've debts that can't be settled h'over seas.

They that 'aven't slept in trenches, 'aven't brothered with the worms,

'Aven't 'ad a bunkie slaughtered at their side,

May some day get together and arrange some sort of terms,

But it isn't likely we'll be satisfied.

There are debts we want to settle, 'and to 'and, and face to face,

There are one or two Hi've promised that Hi'd square;

And Hi cannot 'old my 'ead up, 'ere or in the other place,

Till Hi've settled for my bunkie, lying there.

We all are warriors with sin. Crusading knights,

we come to earth

With spotless plumes and shining shields to joust

with foes and prove our worth.

The world is but a battlefield where strong and

weak men fill the lists,

And some make war with humble prayers, and

some with swords and some with fists.

And some for pleasure or for peace forsake their

purposes and goals

And barter for the scarlet joys of ease and pomp,

their knightly souls.

We're all enlisted soldiers here, in service for

the term called life

And each of us in some grim way must bear his

portion of the strife.

Temptations everywhere assail. Men do not rise

by fearing sin,

Nor he who keeps within his tent, unharmed,

unscratched, the crown shall win.

When wrongs are trampling mortals down and

rank injustice stalks about,

Real manhood to the battle flies, and dies or puts

the foes to rout.

'Tis not the new and shining blade that marks

the soldier of the field,

His glory is his broken sword, his pride the

scars upon his shield;

The crimson stains that sin has left upon his

soul are tongues that speak

The victory of new found strength by one who

yesterday was weak.

And meaningless the spotless plume, the shining

blade that goes through life

And quits this naming battlefield without one

evidence of strife.

We all are warriors with sin, we all are knights

in life's crusades,

And with some form of tyranny, we're sent to

earth to measure blades.

The courage of the soul must gleam in conflict

with some fearful foe,

No man was ever born to life its luxuries alone

to know.

And he who brothers with a sin to keep his outward

garb unsoiled

And fears to battle with a wrong, shall find his

soul decayed and spoiled.

When an empty sleeve or a sightless eye

Or a legless form I see,

I breathe my thanks to my God on High

For His watchful care o'er me.

And I say to myself, as the cripple goes

Half stumbling on his way:

I may brag and boast, but that brother knows

Why the old flag floats to-day.

I think as I sit in my cozy den

Puffing one of my many pipes

That I've served with all of my fellow men

The glorious Stars and Stripes.

Then I see a troop in the faded blue

And a few in the dusty gray,

And I have to laugh at the deeds I do

For the flag that floats to-day.

I see men tangled in pointed wire,

The sport of the blazing sun,

Mangled and maimed by a leaden fire

As the tides of battle run,

And I fancy I hear their piteous calls

For merciful death, and then

The cannons cease and the darkness falls,

And those fluttering things are men.

Out there in the night they beg for death,

Yet the Reaper spurns their cries,

And it seems his jest to leave them breath

For their pitiful pleas and sighs.

And I am here in my cozy room

In touch with the joys of life,

I am miles away from the fields of doom

And the gory scenes of strife.

I never have vainly called for aid,

Nor suffered real pangs of thirst,

I have marched with life in its best parade

And never have seen its worst.

In the flowers of ease I have ever basked,

And I think as the Flag I see

How much of service from some it's asked,

How little of toil from me.

Because I am his father, they

Expect me to put grief away;

Because I am a man, and rough

And sometimes short of speech and gruff,

The women folks at home believe

His absence doesn't make me grieve;

But how I felt, they little know,

The day I smiled and let him go.

They little know the dreams I had

Long cherished for my sturdy lad;

They little guess the wrench it meant

That day when off to war he went;

They little know the tears I checked

While standing, smiling and erect;

They never heard my smothered sigh


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