IN A BELGIAN GARDEN

Once in a Belgian garden,

(Ah, many months ago!)

I saw, like pale Madonnas,

The tall, white lilies blow.

Great poplars swayed and trembled

Afar against the sky,

And green with flags and rushes,

The river wandered by.

Amid the waving wheat-fields

Glowed poppies blazing red,

And showering strange wild music

A lark rose overhead.

. . . . . .

The lark has ceased his singing,

The wheat is trodden low,

And in the blood-stained garden

No more the lilies blow.

And where green poplars trembled

Stand shattered trunks instead,

And lines of small white crosses

Keep guard above the dead.

For here brave lads and noble,

From lands beyond the deep,

Beneath the small white crosses

Have laid them down to sleep.

They laid them down with gladness

Upon the alien plain,

That this same Belgian garden

Might bud and bloom again.

F. O. Call

By permission of the Author