THE FIELDS OF THE MARNE
The fields of the Marne are growing green,The river murmurs on and on;No more the hail of mitrailleuse,The cannon from the hills are gone.The herder leads the sheep afield,Where grasses grow o’er broken blade;And toil-worn women till the soilO’er human mold, in sunny glade.The splintered shell and bayonetAre lost in crumbling village wall;No sniper scans the rim of hills,No sentry hears the night bird call.From blood-wet soil and sunken trench,The flowers bloom in summer light;And farther down the vale beyond,The peasant smiles are sad, yet bright.The wounded Marne is growing green,The gash of Hun no longer smarts;Democracy is born again,But what about the troubled hearts?Frank Carbaugh, Sgt., Inf.(Written while lying wounded in hospital; died August, 1918.)
The fields of the Marne are growing green,The river murmurs on and on;No more the hail of mitrailleuse,The cannon from the hills are gone.The herder leads the sheep afield,Where grasses grow o’er broken blade;And toil-worn women till the soilO’er human mold, in sunny glade.The splintered shell and bayonetAre lost in crumbling village wall;No sniper scans the rim of hills,No sentry hears the night bird call.From blood-wet soil and sunken trench,The flowers bloom in summer light;And farther down the vale beyond,The peasant smiles are sad, yet bright.The wounded Marne is growing green,The gash of Hun no longer smarts;Democracy is born again,But what about the troubled hearts?Frank Carbaugh, Sgt., Inf.(Written while lying wounded in hospital; died August, 1918.)
The fields of the Marne are growing green,The river murmurs on and on;No more the hail of mitrailleuse,The cannon from the hills are gone.
The fields of the Marne are growing green,
The river murmurs on and on;
No more the hail of mitrailleuse,
The cannon from the hills are gone.
The herder leads the sheep afield,Where grasses grow o’er broken blade;And toil-worn women till the soilO’er human mold, in sunny glade.
The herder leads the sheep afield,
Where grasses grow o’er broken blade;
And toil-worn women till the soil
O’er human mold, in sunny glade.
The splintered shell and bayonetAre lost in crumbling village wall;No sniper scans the rim of hills,No sentry hears the night bird call.
The splintered shell and bayonet
Are lost in crumbling village wall;
No sniper scans the rim of hills,
No sentry hears the night bird call.
From blood-wet soil and sunken trench,The flowers bloom in summer light;And farther down the vale beyond,The peasant smiles are sad, yet bright.
From blood-wet soil and sunken trench,
The flowers bloom in summer light;
And farther down the vale beyond,
The peasant smiles are sad, yet bright.
The wounded Marne is growing green,The gash of Hun no longer smarts;Democracy is born again,But what about the troubled hearts?Frank Carbaugh, Sgt., Inf.(Written while lying wounded in hospital; died August, 1918.)
The wounded Marne is growing green,
The gash of Hun no longer smarts;
Democracy is born again,
But what about the troubled hearts?
Frank Carbaugh, Sgt., Inf.
(Written while lying wounded in hospital; died August, 1918.)