The King's Pilgrimage King George V's Visit to War Cemeteries in France - 1922 |
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OUR King went forth on pilgrimage | 1 |
His prayers and vows to pay | |
To them that saved our heritage | |
And cast their own away. | |
And there was little show of pride, | 5 |
Or prows of belted steel, | |
For the clean-swept oceans every side | |
Lay free to every keel. |
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And the first land he found, it was shoal and banky ground - | 9 |
Where the broader seas begin, | |
And a pale tide grieving at the broken harbour-mouth | |
Where they worked the death-ships in. | |
And there was neither gull on the wing, | 13 |
Nor wave that could not tell | |
Of the bodies that were buckled in the life-buoy's ring | |
That slid from swell to swell. |
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All that they had they gave - they gave; and they shall not return, | 17 |
For these are those that have no grave where any heart may mourn. |
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And the next land he found, it was low and hollow ground - | 19 |
Where once the cities stood, | |
But the man-high thistle had been master of it all, | |
Or the bulrush by the flood. | |
And there was neither blade of grass, | 23 |
Nor lone star in the sky | |
But shook to see some spirit pass | |
And took its agony. |
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And the next land he found, it was bare and hilly ground - | 27 |
Where once the bread-corn grew, | |
But the fields were cankered and the water was defiled, | |
And the trees were riven through. | |
And there was neither paved highway, | 31 |
Nor secret path in the wood, | |
But had borne its weight of the broken clay | |
And darkened 'neath the blood. |
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Father and mother they put aside, and the nearer love also - | 35 |
An hundred thousand men who died whose graves shall no man know. |
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And the last land he found, it was fair and level ground | 35 |
About a carven stone, | |
And a stark Sword brooding on the bosom of the Cross | |
Where high and low are one. | |
And there was grass and the living trees, | 41 |
And the flowers of the spring, | |
And there lay gentlemen from out of all the seas | |
That ever called him King. |
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'Twixt Nieuport sands and the eastward lands where the Four Red Rivers spring, | 45 |
Five hundred thousand gentlemen of those that served their King. |
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All that they had they gave - they gave - | 47 |
In sure and single faith. | |
There can no knowledge reach the grave | |
To make them grudge their death | |
Save only if they understood | |
That, after all was done, | |
We they redeemed denied their blood | |
nd mocked the gains it won. |
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