ODE TO THE SPIRIT OF WIRELESS VICTORY.

(An attempt, suggested by certain Marconigrams, to shed still further light on the nature of the principal Teutonic deity.)

What to thee are marching legions,

Cannon smoke and sabre thrust,

Goddess of the cloud-rimmed regions

In whose might the Germans trust?

Though, however high and regal,

Kingly pomp may break and bend

Soiled with murder (labelled legal),

Thou, more active than the eagle,

Thou endurest to the end.

Thou wast not behind their banners

When they scoured the Belgian plain,

When they taught their Teuton manners

By the wreck of farm and fane;

Clear of battle's mire and fury

On those sightless feet and hid,

Thou wast wafted with the story

Saying this was German glory

To Chicago and Madrid.

Long e'er Paris heard the thunder,

Herald of the Uhlan's lance,

Thou wast making Stockholm wonder

At the dying flame of France:

Not on wires, with no word written,

Thou hadst trod thine airy track,

Faster than the mailed mitten,

And behold our fleet was smitten

Somewhere near the Skager Rack.

So. And when their lines are broken,

When their shrapnel falls less fast,

Shalt thou fail to send a token

Undefeated to the last?

Surely not. Red devastation

Still shall urge by land and sea

Every proud advancing nation

While Marconi's installation

Rules the skies of Germany.

Still when pagan peoples sever

Railway line and telegraph

Thou shalt keep thy staunch endeavour,

Thou shalt scatter us like chaff.

Still, O goddess of the Prussians,

Thou shalt sound thy trump of tin

Undeterred by rude concussions

While the Frenchmen hail the Russians

On the flagstones of Berlin.

Evoe.


A German Motto:—"Gott mit Huns."