The Poetry Corner

Our Volunteers.

By Kate Seymour Maclean

Where shall we write your names, ye brave! Where build for you a monument, Who lie in many a sylvan grave, Stretched half across the continent! Young, bright and brave, the very flower And choice of all we had to give, With you what glory ceased to live,-- Or lives again in hearts of men. An inspiration and a power! For when one sunny day in June, A sudden war-cry shook the land, As if from out clear skies at noon Had dropped the lightning's deadly brand-- Ah then, while rang our British cheers, And pealed the bugle, rolled the drum, We saw the Nation rise like one! Swift formed the files,--a thousand miles Of them, our gallant Volunteers! Deep clanged the bells, the drums did beat, And still from east and west they came; Echoed the street with martial feet, From north, from south, with hearts aflame: Ah, still the tires of freedom burn,-- Be witness, Ridgway's silent shade, No foe shall dare our land invade, While hearts like those that met the foes, Still beat like theirs,--the undismayed, The brave, who never will return. Our Country holds them in her heart, Shrined with her mountains and her rivers; And still for them her proud lip quivers, And tears to her great eyelids start: But they are tears of love and pride, And she shall tell to coming years The story of her Volunteers, For all their names are hers and fame's-- The brave who live, the brave who died.