Hart, Albert Bushnell, 1854-1943 . The Romance of the Civil War
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29. Our Country's Call
By WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT (1861)

People now-a-days do not realize the enthusiasm with which people went into the Civil War. Mr. Bryant, journalist and poet, was one of many to arouse their countrymen with their most glowing thoughts.

LAY down the axe, fling by the spade:
     Leave in its track the toiling plough;
The rifle and the bayonet-blade
     For arms like yours were fitter now;
And let the hands that ply the pen
     Quit the light task, and learn to wield
The horseman's crooked brand, and rein
     The charger on the battle-field.


Our country calls; away I away!
     To where the blood-stream blots the green.
Strike to defend the gentlest sway
     That Time in all his course has seen.
See, from a thousand coverts -- see
     Spring the armed foes that haunt her track;
They rush to smite her down, and we
     Must beat the banded traitors back.


Ho! sturdy as the oaks ye cleave,
     And moved as soon to fear and flight,-
Men of the glade and forest! leave
     Your woodcraft for the field of fight.



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The arms that wield the axe must pour
     An iron tempest on the foe;
His serried ranks shall reel before
     The arm that lays the panther low.


And ye who breast the mountain storm
     By grassy steep or highland lake,
Come, for the land ye love, to form
     A bulwark that no foe can break.
Stand, like your own gray cliffs that mock
     The whirlwind; stand in her defence:
The blast as soon shall move the rock
     As rushing squadrons bear ye thence.


And ye, whose homes are by her grand
     Swift rivers, rising far away,
Come from the depth of her green land
     As mighty in your march as they;
As terrible as when the rains
     Have swelled them over bank and bourne,
With sudden floods to drown the plains
     And sweep along the woods uptorn.


And ye who throng, beside the deep,
     Her ports and hamlets of the strand,
In number like the waves that leap
     On his long murmuring marge of sand,
Come, like that deep, when, o'er his brim,
     He rises, all his floods to pour,
And flings the proudest barks that swim,
     A helpless wreck against his shore.


Few, few were they whose swords, of old,
     Won the fair land in which we dwell;
But we are many, we who hold
     The grim resolve to guard it well.



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Strike for that broad and goodly land,
     Blow after blow, till men shall see
That Might and Right move hand in hand, And glorious must their triumph be.