Classic and Contemporary Poetry
HOME, by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND First Line: Oh! Mother the bells are ringing as never they rang before Last Line: "but the cradle will be remembered, and home is aye home to them!" | ||||||||
"OH! Mother the bells are ringing as never they rang before, And banners aloft are flying, and open is every door, While down in the streets are thousands of men I have never seen -- But friendly are all the faces -- oh! Mother, what can it mean?" "My little one," said the mother, "for many long, weary years -- Thro' days that the sunshine mocked at, and nights that were wet with tears, I have waited and watched in silence, too proud to speak, and now The pulse of my heart is leaping, for the children have kept the vow. "And there they are coming, coming, the brothers you never knew, But, sightless, my ears would know them, so steady and firm and true Is the tramp of men whose fathers trod where the wind blows free, Over the heights of Queenston, and willows of Chateaugay. "For whether it be a thousand, or whether a single man -- In the calm of peace, or battle, since ever the race began, No human eye has seen it -- 't is an undiscovered clime, Where the feet of my children's fathers have not stepped and beaten time. "The enemy at my threshold had boasted and jeered and cried -- 'The pledge of your offsprings' birthright your children have swept aside -- They cumber the land of strangers, they dwell in the alien's tent Till "home" is a word forgotten, and "love" but a bow unbent. "'Planners and builders of cities (were ever such men as these?), Counsellors, guides, and moulders of the strangers' destinies -- Conquerors, yet are they conquered, and this is the word and sign, You boast of their wise seed-sowing, but the harvest they reap is mine.' "Ah! little the stranger knew me -- this mocking but friendly foe, The youngest mother of nations! how could the stranger know The faith of the old grey mother, -- her sorrows and hopes and fears? Let her speak when her sons are tested, like mine, for a thousand years! "Afar in the dim savanna when the dawn of the spring is near, What is it wakes the wild goose, calling him loud and clear? What is it brings him homeward, battered and tempest-torn? Are they weaker than birds of passage, the children whom I have borne? "Nay! the streets of the city tremble with the tread that shakes the world, When the sons of the blood foregather, and the mother flag flies unfurled -- Brothers are welcoming brothers, and the voices that pierce the blue Answer the enemy's taunting -- and the children of York are true! "Wanderers maybe, traitors never! By the scroll of their fathers' lives! The faith of the land that bore them, and the honor of their wives! We may lose them, our own strong children, blossom and root and stem -- But the cradle will be remembered, and home is aye home to them!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A RAINY DAY IN CAMP by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND AUTUMN DAYS by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND BARBOTTE (BULL-POUT) by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND BATEESE AND HIS LITTLE DECOYS by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND BATEESE THE LUCKY MAN by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND BLOOM - A SONG OF COBALT by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND BOULE by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND BRUNO THE HUNTER by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND CANADIAN FOREVER by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND CAUDA MORRHUAE by WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND |
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