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Soldiers of the Light

9781465682239
213 pages
Library of Alexandria
Overview
Stand we awhile at gaze, in the Place of the Battle of Battles: High on the hill at the south, where over the fair-lying farmland Warren keeps watch in bronze, here under the sky of the summer Stand we awhile at gaze, far-scanning the roads and the ridges, Doubtful that such things were. Oh, sweet with the wafts of the wildrose, Sweet is the breath of the summer, the hushed spirit lapping and lulling! Man feels near to the kind red earth; as her nursling she draws him Close, ah close, to the fragrant warmth of her Indian bosom. Deep he drinks of life; and death is a dream in the distance. Rare is the sweet of the summer; the good world’s bounty and beauty Such as they saw and lost, who bought us our peace with their passion. Such, on the great Three Days of the great Third Year of the war-time, Lay this pleasant land, with the long South Mountain to westward; Blue these billowing hills circled it, friendly enfolded, Lucent in sun, or dark with the shadows of clouds floating over; Silvered with ghostly gray of the rains, in their soft-footed marches Melting away and passing, and leaving the blue in the sunlight. So the farmland lay, with the yellow gleam of its wheatfields, Green of the standing corn, a-glisten in beauteous battalions, Pastures with dreaming cattle, and tawny streams where they loiter, Dark-green orchard slopes, and the small white houses of farmers. So lay the little town, with its brick-paved walks and its alleys, Garden-glimpses fair, with the faint-blue hills for a background, Over the whitewashed fences the rosy hollyhocks leaning; Fate-shadowed, sleeping town, in its listless grasp as it slumbered Holding the reins of power, the gathered reins of the roadways Stretched to the north and south, to the northwest and northeast and southeast, Roadways half a score, in the grasp of the fate-shadowed sleeper,— Reins of power indeed, should a strong hand suddenly seize them! What strong hand should seize? Swift-reaching, and sinewed with iron, Masterful hand of Lee, great Captain, intrepid invader? Far-away cities feared. Or, haply, hand new to the wielding One huge host as a sword, untried in its strength or its weakness, Unknown hand of Meade, at the southward uncertainly groping? Stirred with a dream of dread was the little town as it slumbered; Sudden it started and woke.