Men betrayed, of that island a myth and a wonder; Of a lonely beach, answering thunder with thunder Under the swooping planes, facing the roar from sea ... Men outnumbered, afar, who fell for the free. Men of the Corps who warred till the end and there-after With wide-open Hell, battling with curses and laughter; Those with a victory earned that was not to be, Watching the hordes of the foe wade in from sea ... Those with five guns, four planes, who blasted wholly Ships of the foe, while sands in the glass ran slowly, As from valor's heart the vivid lifeblood runs ... Men echoing orders, serving and firing the guns. Men who met death from the sky, and fire and slaughter, With steady hand and eye, by the bright water ... Theirs the unwithering wreath beyond our giving, Theirs the light beyond deaththe eternal debt of the living. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VICTORY IN DEFEAT by EDWIN MARKHAM IN A CUBAN GARDEN by SARA TEASDALE TO THE MEMORY OF MR. OLDHAM by JOHN DRYDEN AT A LUNAR ECLIPSE by THOMAS HARDY THE RABBIT by ELIZABETH MADOX ROBERTS THE WET WASH by MARIANA BACHMAN A LETTER by PHILIP JAMES BAILEY |