| What flower is this that greets the morn, |
| Its hues from Heaven so freshly born? |
| With burning star and flaming band |
| It kindles all the sunset land: |
| O tell us what its name may be,— |
| Is this the Flower of Liberty? |
| It is the banner of the free, |
| The starry Flower of Liberty! |
| |
| In savage Nature's far abode |
| Its tender seed our fathers sowed; |
| The storm-winds rocked its swelling bud, |
| Its opening leaves were streaked with blood, |
| Till lo! earth's tyrants shook to see |
| The full-blown Flower of Liberty! |
| Then hail the banner of the free, |
| The starry Flower of Liberty! |
| |
| Behold its streaming rays unite, |
| One mingling flood of braided light— |
| The red that fires the Southern rose, |
| With spotless white from Northern snows, |
| And, spangled o'er its azure, see |
| The sister Stars of Liberty! |
| Then hail the banner of the free, |
| The starry Flower of Liberty! |
| |
| The blades of heroes fence it round, |
| Where'er it springs is holy ground; |
| From tower and dome its glories spread; |
| It waves where lonely sentries tread; |
| It makes the land as ocean free, |
| And plants an empire on the sea! |
| Then hail the banner of the free, |
| The starry Flower of Liberty! |
| |
| Thy sacred leaves, fair Freedom's flower, |
| Shall ever float on dome and tower, |
| To all their heavenly colors true, |
| In blackening frost or crimson dew,— |
| And God love us as we love thee, |
| Thrice holy Flower of Liberty! |
| Then hail the banner of the free, |
| The starry Flower of Liberty! |
| |
| Oliver Wendell Holmes. |
| Little lamb, who made thee? |
| Dost thou know who made thee, |
| Gave thee life, and made thee feed |
| By the stream and o'er the mead? |
| Gave thee clothing of delight,— |
| Softest clothing, woolly, bright? |
| Gave thee such a tender voice, |
| Making all the vales rejoice? |
| Little lamb, who made thee? |
| Dost thou know who made thee? |
| |
| Little lamb, I'll tell thee; |
| Little lamb, I'll tell thee; |
| He is called by thy name, |
| For he calls himself a lamb. |
| He is meek and He is mild; |
| He became a little child: |
| I a child, and thou a lamb, |
| We are called by His name. |
| Little lamb, God bless thee! |
| Little lamb, God bless thee! |
| |
| William Blake. |
| "Corporal Green!" the orderly cried; |
| "Here!" was the answer, loud and clear, |
| From the lips of the soldier standing near, |
| And "Here" was the answer the next replied. |
| |
| "Cyrus Drew!"—then a silence fell— |
| This time no answer followed the call, |
| Only the rear man had seen him fall, |
| Killed or wounded he could not tell. |
| |
| There they stood in the failing light, |
| These men of battle, with grave dark looks, |
| As plain to be read as open books, |
| While slowly gathered the shades of night. |
| |
| The fern on the hillside was splashed with blood, |
| And down in the corn, where the poppies grew |
| Were redder stains than the poppies knew |
| And crimson-dyed was the river's flood. |
| |
| "Herbert Kline!" At the call there came |
| Two stalwart soldiers into the line, |
| Bearing between them Herbert Kline, |
| Wounded and bleeding, to answer his name. |
| |
| "Ezra Kerr!"—and a voice said "Here!" |
| "Hiram Kerr!"—but no man replied. |
| They were brothers, these two; the sad winds sighed, |
| And a shudder crept through the cornfield near. |
| |
| "Ephraim Deane!" then a soldier spoke; |
| "Deane carried our regiment's colors," he said; |
| "Where our ensign was shot, I left him dead, |
| Just after the enemy wavered and broke. |
| |
| "Close by the roadside his body lies; |
| I paused a moment and gave him a drink, |
| He murmured his mother's name I think, |
| And Death came with it and closed his eyes." |
| |
| 'Twas a victory; yes, but it cost us dear— |
| For that company's roll when called that night, |
| Of a hundred men who went into the fight, |
| Numbered but twenty that answered "Here!" |
| |
| N.G. Shepherd. |
| God send us a little home |
| To come back to when we roam— |
| Low walls and fluted tiles, |
| Wide windows, a view for miles; |
| Red firelight and deep chairs; |
| Small white beds upstairs; |
| Great talk in little nooks; |
| Dim colors, rows of books; |
| One picture on each wall; |
| Not many things at all. |
| God send us a little ground— |
| Tall trees standing round, |
| Homely flowers in brown sod, |
| Overhead, Thy stars, O God! |
| God bless, when winds blow, |
| Our home and all we know. |
| |
| London "Spectator." |