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Ode - Melbourne Shrine Of Remembrance

Topics: classic

So long as memory, valour, and faith endure,     Let these stones witness, through the years to come,     How once there was a people fenced secure     Behind great waters girdling a far home.          Their own and their lands youth ran side by side     Heedless and headlong as their unyoked seas,     Lavish oer all, and set in stubborn pride     Of judgment, nurtured by accepted peace.          Thus, suddenly, war took them, seas and skies     Joined with the earth for slaughter. In a breath     They, scoffing at all talk of sacrifice,     Gave themselves without idle words to death.          Thronging as cities throng to watch a game     Or their own herds move southward with the year,     Secretly, swiftly, from their ports they came,     So that before half earth had heard their name     Half earth had learned to speak of them with fear;          Because of certain men who strove to reach,     Through the red surf, the crest no man might hold,     And gave their name for ever to a beach     Which shall outlive Troys tale when Time is old;          Because of horsemen, gathered apart and hid,     Merciless riders whom Megiddo sent forth     When the outflanking hour struck, and bid     Them close and bar the drove-roads to the north;          And those who, when men feared the last March flood     Of Western war had risen beyond recall,     Stormed through the night from Amiens and made good,     At their glad cost, the breach that perilled all.          Then they returned to their desired land,     The kindly cities and plains where they were bred,     Having revealed their nation in earths sight     So long as sacrifice and honour stand,     And their own sun at the hushed hour shall light     The shrine of these their dead!

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"So long as memory, valour, and faith endure,..."

Rudyard Kipling's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Ode - Melbourne Shrine Of Remembrance"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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