The Poetry Corner

Canada's Eighteen.

By W. M. MacKeracher

At Paardeberg they fell, Within the Orange State; They did their duty well; They bravely met their fate. A stubborn fight they made Upon the level plain, While from the barricade The bullets poured like rain. They fiercely charged the trench; They took the outer line; Who saw a visage blench? Who heard a voice repine? They bore the ruthless fire; But deadly was the cost: They lived not to retire, Nor saw their capture lost. No lustrous deed they wrought To prompt the epic pen: They only bravely fought, And gave their lives like men. And yet no hero's fame That rings across the seas, Shall e'er eclipse the name And memory of these. While suns shall rise and set Upon the fatal scene, We never shall forget Our Canada's Eighteen. And now, as Britain weaves The garland of her grief, We place among the leaves A blood-red maple leaf.