TO THOSE WHO DEFENDED
(THE LLOYD MCKIM GARRISON Pmzia POEM HARVARD UNIVERSITY, 1916)
I
How vain it seems, how vain the valiant strength Of nations risen in splendour t0 the sun,
For down the weary stretch of battle-length Surges a conflict that is never done,
And of all victories and losses, none
Survives the memory of a day, and time
Takes back the withering garlands one by one
Of vaunted triumph and of cause sublime.
O Dead who sacrificed your years of prime,
You sacrificed them vainly, and but died
Like actors in some oft-repeated mime,
Some outworn play of Lust and Greed and Pride, Some allegory writ by bloody hands
Far in the unknown past, in devastated lands.
[53]