I was a boy when I heard three red words a thousand Frenchmen died in the streets for: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity -- I asked why men die for words. I was older; men with mustaches, sideburns, lilacs, told me the high golden words are: Mother, Home, and Heaven -- other older men with face decorations said: God, Duty, Immortality -- they sang these threes slow from deep lungs. Years ticked off their say-so on the great clocks of doom and damnation, soup and nuts: meteors flashed their say-so: and out of great Russia came three dusky syllables workmen took guns and went out to die for: Bread, Peace, Land. And I met a marine of the U.S.A., a leatherneck with a girl on his for a memory in ports circling the earth and he said: Tell me how to say three things and I always get by -- gimme a plate of ham and eggs -- how much? -- and -- do you love me, kid? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ADOPTED CHILD by FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 99. AZ-ZABOOR by EDWIN ARNOLD THE HEART'S COLLOQUY by WILLIAM ROSE BENET BABYLONIAN LYRIC by GORDON BOTTOMLEY THE NEW MOON by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT AN IMPRESSION by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON A GIRL'S COMPLAINT TO HER HEART by GEORGE HERBERT CLARKE |