A beautiful yet excedeeingly gory (or vice versa) anti-war poem, by wonderful Victorian London poetess and feminist (one of my favourites) Eliza Cook:
" Whom do we crown with the laurel leaf?
The hero-god, the soldier chief;
But we dream of the crushing cannon-wheel,
Of the flying shot and the reeking steel.
Of the crimson plain where warm blood smokes.
Where clangour deafens and sulphur chokes ;
Oh, who can love the laurel wreath,
Pluck'd from the gory field of death ?
Whom do we crown with summer flowers ?
The young and fair in their happiest hours.
But the buds will only live in the light
Of festive day or a glittering night ;
We know the vermil tints will fade
That pleasure dies with the bloomy braid :
And who can prize the coronal
That's formed to dazzle, wither, and fall ?"
Sheer baroque vanitas.
Sheer critique, in the right words, of warfare and superficiality.
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