Litscape.com

The Colonel's Shield

By Elizabeth Stoddard


Your picture, slung about my neck
The day we went afield,
Swung out before the trench;
It caught the eye of rank and file,
Who knew The Colonel's Shield.

I thrust it back, and with my men
(Our General rode ahead)
We stormed the great redoubt,
As if it were an easy thing,
But rows of us fell dead!

Your picture hanging on my neck,
Up with my men I rushed;
We made an awful charge:
And then my horse, The Lady Bess, Dropped, and -- my leg was crushed!

The blood of battle in my veins
(A blue-coat dragged me out), --
But I remembered you;
I kissed your picture -- did you know?
And yelled, For the redoubt!

The Twenty-fourth, my scarred old dogs,
Growled back, He'll put us through;
We'll take him in our arms:
Our picture there -- the girl he loves,
Shall see what we can do.

The foe was silenced -- so were we.
I lay upon the field,
Among the Twenty-fourth;
Your picture, shattered on my breast
Had proved The Colonel's Shield.

Source Book

Poems

by Elizabeth Stoddard

Copyright 1860
Published by Ticknor And Fields, Boston

Buy at Art.com


Breath of Spring

By

L Johnson

30x24 Fine Art Print

Buy From Art.com

Frame It

To Link To This Page

If you have a website and feel that a link to this page would fit in nicely with the content of your pages, please feel free to link to this page. Copy and paste the following html into your webpage. (You may modify the link text to suit your needs).

This link will look like this:

The Colonel's Shield
by Elizabeth Stoddard

 

Home | Authors | Poems | Fables | Songs
Themes | Elements of Poetry | About | Contact
Website design by
The Bitmill Inc.
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional
Valid CSS!
Visit Art.com