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Stonewall Jackson's Grave.[A]

Topics: classic

A simple, sodded mound of earth,         Without a line above it;     With only daily votive flowers         To prove that any love it:     The token flag that silently         Each breeze's visit numbers,     Alone keeps martial ward above         The hero's dreamless slumbers.     No name? - no record? Ask the world;         The world has read his story -     If all its annals can unfold         A prouder tale of glory: -     If ever merely human life         Hath taught diviner moral, -     If ever round a worthier brow         Was twined a purer laurel!     A twelvemonth only, since his sword         Went flashing through the battle -     A twelvemonth only, since his ear         Heard war's last deadly rattle -     And yet, have countless pilgrim-feet         The pilgrim's guerdon paid him,     And weeping women come to see         The place where they have laid him.     Contending armies bring, in turn,         Their meed of praise or honor,     And Pallas here has paused to bind         The cypress wreath upon her:     It seems a holy sepulchre,         Whose sanctities can waken     Alike the love of friend or foe, -         Of Christian or of pagan.     THEY come to own his high emprise,         Who fled in frantic masses,     Before the glittering bayonet         That triumphed at Manassas:     Who witnessed Kernstown's fearful odds,         As on their ranks he thundered,     Defiant as the storied Greek,         Amid his brave three hundred!     They well recall the tiger spring,         The wise retreat, the rally,     The tireless march, the fierce pursuit,         Through many a mountain valley:     Cross Keys unlock new paths to fame,         And Port Republic's story     Wrests from his ever-vanquish'd foes,         Strange tributes to his glory.     Cold Harbor rises to their view, -         The Cedars' gloom is o'er them;     Antietam's rough and rugged heights,         Stretch mockingly before them:     The lurid flames of Fredericksburg         Right grimly they remember,     That lit the frozen night's retreat,         That wintry-wild December!     The largess of their praise is flung         With bounty, rare and regal;      - Is it because the vulture fears         No longer the dead eagle?     Nay, rather far accept it thus, -         An homage true and tender,     As soldier unto soldier's worth, -         As brave to brave will render,     But who shall weigh the wordless grief         That leaves in tears its traces,     As round their leader crowd again,         The bronzed and veteran faces!     The "Old Brigade" he loved so well -         The mountain men, who bound him     With bays of their own winning, ere         A tardier fame had crowned him;     The legions who had seen his glance         Across the carnage flashing,     And thrilled to catch his ringing "charge"         Above the volley crashing; -     Who oft had watched the lifted hand,         The inward trust betraying,     And felt their courage grow sublime,         While they beheld him praying!     Good knights and true as ever drew         Their swords with knightly Roland;     Or died at Sobieski's side,         For love of martyr'd Poland;     Or knelt with Cromwell's Ironsides;         Or sang with brave Gustavus;     Or on the plain of Austerlitz,         Breathed out their dying AVES!     Rare fame! rare name! - If chanted praise,         With all the world to listen, -     If pride that swells a nation's soul, -         If foemen's tears that glisten, -     If pilgrims' shrining love, - if grief         Which nought may soothe or sever, -     If THESE can consecrate, - this spot         Is sacred ground forever!

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"A simple, sodded mound of earth,..."

This evocative piece by Margaret J. Preston, titled "Stonewall Jackson's Grave.[A]", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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