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Interlude - A Dirge Of Joy

Topics: classic

Oh! this is a joyful dirge, my friends, and this is a hymn of praise;     And this is a clamour of Victory, and a pan of Ancient Days.     It isnt a Yelp of the Battlefield; nor a Howl of the Bounding Wave,     But an ode to the Things that the War has Killed, and a lay of the Festive Grave.     Tis a triolet of the Tomb, you bet, and a whoop because of Despair,     And its sung as I stand on my hoary head and wave my legs in the air!     Oh! I dance on the grave of the Suffragette (I dance on my hands and dome),     And the Sanctity-of-the-Marriage-Tie and the Breaking-Up-of-the-Home.     And I dance on the grave of the weird White-Slave that died when the war began;     And Better-Protection-for-Women-and-Girls, and Men-Made-Laws-for-Man!     Oh, I dance on the Liberal Ladys grave and the Labour Womans, too;     And the grave of the Female lie and shriek, with a dance that is wild and new.     And my only regret in this song-a-let as I dance over dale and hill,     Is the Yarn-of-the-Wife and the Tale-of-the-Girl that never a war can kill.     Oh, I dance on the grave of the want-ter-write, and I dance on the Tomb of the Sneer,     And poet-and-author-and-critic, too, who used to be great round here.     But Old Mother Often (Mother of Ten) and Parent escaped from the grave,     And Pro Bono Publico liveth again, as Victis, or Honour the Brave.     Oh, lightly I danced upon Politics grave where the Friend of the Candidate slept,     And over the Female Political Devil, oh wildly I bounded and leapt.     But this dance shall be nothing compared with the dance of the spook of the writer who sings     On the grave of the bard and the Bulletins grave, out there at the Finish of Things!

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"Oh! this is a joyful dirge, my friends, and this is a hymn of praise;..."

Henry Lawson's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Interlude - A Dirge Of Joy"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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