The Dragon's Teeth

BY CAROLINE DUER

Oh, sunny, quiet, fruitful fields of France,

Golden and green a month ago,

Through you the great red tides of war's advance

Sweep raging to and fro.

For patient toil of years,

Blood, fire and tears

Reward you now!

The dragon's teeth are sown, and in a night

There springs to life the armed host!

And men leap forth bewildered to the fight,

Legion for legion lost!

"Toll for my tale of sons,"

Roar out the guns,

"Cost what it cost!"

This is a "holy war"! A holy war?

With thousand millions maimed and dead!

To show one Power dares more than others dare—

That higher rears one Head!

How will you count your gain,

Lord of the slain,

When all is said?

The dragon's teeth are sown, and in a night

There springs to life the armed host!

And men leap forth bewildered to the fight,

Legion for legion lost!

"Toll for my tale of sons,"

Roar out the guns,

"Cost what it cost!"

Oh, tragedy of Nations! Who may see

The outcome, or foretell the end?

Hark men and weeping women, misery

That none may mend.

Ruin in peaceful marts,

Dazed commerce, stricken arts.

God, to the ravaged hearts

Some mercy send!

The dragon's teeth are sown, and in a night

There springs to life the armed host!

And men leap forth bewildered to the fight,

Legion for legion lost!

"Toll for my tale of sons,"

Roar out the guns,

"Cost what it cost!"

Copyright, 1914, by The New York Times Company.


The Greatest of Campaigns

The French Official Account

The Associated Press received in London on March 5, 1915, an official French historical review of the operations in the western theatre of war from its beginning up to the end of January, the first six months, which in terseness and dramatic power will rank among the world's most important military documents. The first chapter of the review was released for publication by The Associated Press on March 16 and appears below. It is one of those documents, rare in military annals, that frankly confesses a succession of initial reverses and official incompetence, only retrieved by exercise of the utmost skill in retreat.