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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE FATHER OF THE REGIMENT, by GEORGE WALTER THORNBURY Poet's Biography First Line: Thick snow-wreaths weighed upon the furs Last Line: From russian sword and ball. Subject(s): Dnieper River, Russia; Russia; Russia - Napoleonic War; Dnept River, Russia; Soviet Union; Russians | |||
THICK snow-wreaths weighed upon the firs, Snow shrouded all the plain, Snow brooded in the dusky clouds, Snow matted the chill rain, Snow filled the valleys to the brim, Snow whitened all the air; The snowdrifts on the Dnieper road Blinded us with their glare. The white snow on our eagles weighed, It capped each crimson plume; Knee-deep it now began to rise, Striking us all with gloom. It clotted on our wagon wheels, And on our knapsacks weighed, It clung to every soldier's breast, And every bayonet-blade. It quenched the shells and dulled the shot That round us faster fell, As all our bayonets glancing moved Down the long Russian dell That to the Dnieper river bore. Ney battled in our rear; Griloff was nearly on us then, The Cossacks gathered near. The Russian lancers charged our guards, Our grenadiers, and horse; The Russian serfs, with axe and knife, Were gathering in force, As floods of us with carts and guns Bore down upon the ridge That led, by snowy swathes and slopes, Unto the Dnieper bridge. The sun, a dull broad spot of blood, Smouldered through icy clouds; The snow, in blinding heavy flakes, Was weaving soldiers' shrouds. Here lay a powder-wagon split, Its wheels all black and torn, And there a gun half buried in The ruts its weight had worn. Drums splashed with blood and broken swords Were scattered everywhere; Our shattered muskets, shakos pierced, Lay partly buried there. Guns foundered, chests of cartridge burst, Lay by the dead defaced; By hasty graves of hillocked snow You could our path have traced. Still one battalion firm was left, Made up of Davoust's men, "The Vieille Roche" we called the band, In admiration then. The "Father of the Regiment," De Maubourg, led us on, With the old Roman's iron will, Though hope had almost gone. Two sons he had, who guarded him From every Cossack spear; One was a grenadier, whose heart Had never known a fear; The other boy a lusty drum Beat by his father's side; I often saw the father smile To see the stripling's pride. There came a rush of ponderous guns, Grinding the red churned snow, Making their way o'er dying men Unto the bridge below. Ney gathered close his prickly squares To keep the Russians back, For fast those yelling Cossacks came Upon our bleeding track. Maubourg was there erect and firm; I saw him through the fire; He stooped to kiss a dying friend, Then seemed to rise the higher. Great gaps the Russian cannon tore Through our retreating ranks, As slowly, grimly, Ney drew back Unto the river banks. Shot in the knee I saw Maubourg, Borne by his sons -- slow -- slow; They staggered o'er the muddy ruts And through the clogging snow. "Fly, leave me, children! Dear to France Young lives are," then he said. They both refused: a round shot came, And struck the eldest -- dead. The boy knelt weeping by his side, Trying in vain to lift The old man's body, which but sank The deeper in the drift. "Leave me, my child!" he cried again. "Think of your mother, -- go. We meet in heaven. I will stay, Death is no more my foe." The boy fell weeping on his breast, And there had gladly died, But I released his clutching hands, And tore him from his side. One kiss -- no more -- and then he went, Beating his drum for us; I did not dare to turn and see The old man perish thus. Again there came a rush of spears, But we drove on the guns, We -- bronze and iron with the heat Of the Egyptian suns. The eagles led, -- our bayonets pressed Over the Dnieper bridge; Ney was the last to turn and pass Down the long gory ridge. The boy became a marshal, sirs; I saw him yesterday Talking to Soult, who loves right well To chat of siege and fray. He often finds our barracks out And comes to see us all, We who escaped from Moscow's fire, From Russian sword and ball. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OXOTA: A SHORT RUSSIAN NOVEL: CHAPTER 259 by LYN HEJINIAN A FOREIGN COUNTRY by JOSEPHINE MILES THE DIAMOND PERSONA by NORMAN DUBIE IN MEMORIAM: 1933 (7. RUSSIA: ANNO 1905) by CHARLES REZNIKOFF TAKE A LETTER TO DMITRI SHOSTAKOVITCH by CARL SANDBURG READING THE RUSSIANS by RUTH STONE THE SOVIET CIRCUS VISITS HAVANA, 1969 by VIRGIL SUAREZ A PROBLEM IN AESTHETICS by KAREN SWENSON THE JACOBITE ON TOWER HILL by GEORGE WALTER THORNBURY THE JESTER'S SERMON by GEORGE WALTER THORNBURY THE THREE TROOPERS DURING THE PROTECTORATE by GEORGE WALTER THORNBURY |
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