BETWEEN THE QUICK AND THE DEAD.

The Appeal's to Justice! Justice lendeth ear

Unstirred by favour, unseduced by fear;

And they who Justice love must check the thrill

Of natural shame, and listen, and be still.

These wrangling tales of horror shake the heart

With pitiful disgust. Oh, glorious part

For British manhood, much bepraised, to play

In that dark land late touched by culture's day!

Are these our Heroes pictured each by each?

We fondly deemed that where our English speech

Sounded, there English hearts, of mould humane.

Justice would strengthen, cruelty restrain.

And is it all a figment of false pride?

Such horrors do our vaunting annals hide

Beneath a world of words, like flowers that wave

In tropic swamps o'er a malarious grave?

These are the questions which perforce intrude

As the long tale of horror coarse and crude,

Rolls out its sickening chapters one by one.

What will the verdict be when all is done?

Conflicting counsels in loud chorus rise,

"Hush the thing up!" the knowing cynic cries,

"Arm not our chuckling enemies at gaze

With charnel dust to foul our brightest bays!

Let the dead past bury its tainted dead,

Lest aliens at our 'heroes' wag the head."

"Shocking! wails out the sentimentalist.

Believe no tale unpleasant, scorn to list

To slanderous charges on the British name!

That brutish baseness, or that sordid shame

Can touch 'our gallant fellows,' is a thing

Incredible. Do not our poets sing,

Our pressmen praise in dithyrambic prose,

The 'lads' who win our worlds and face our foes?

Who never, save to human pity, yield

One step in wilderness or battlefield!"

Meanwhile, with troubled eyes and straining hands,

Silent, attentive, thoughtful, Justice stands.

To her alone let the appeal be made.

Heroes, or merely tools of huckstering Trade,

Men brave, though fallible, or sordid brutes,

Let all be heard. Since each to each imputes

Unmeasured baseness, somewhere the black stain

Must surely rest. The dead speak not, the slain

Have not a voice, save such as that which spoke

From ABEL's blood. Green laurels, or the stroke

Of shame's swift scourge? There's the alternative

Before the lifted eyes of those who live.

One fain would see the grass unstained that waves

In the dark Afric waste o'er those two graves.

To Justice the protagonist makes appeal.

Justice would wish him smirchless as her steel,

But stands with steadfast eyes and unbowed head

Silent—betwixt the Living and the Dead!