Page:A treasury of war poetry, British and American poems of the world war, 1914-1919.djvu/184

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Ah, but he sits in a darkling place,

Hiding his hands, hiding his face,

Hiding his art behind the shine

Of the web that he weaves so long and fine.

Loudly the great wheel hums and rings

And we hear not even the song that he sings.

Over the whirr of the shuttles and all

The roar and the rush, does he hear when we call?

Only the colours that grow and glow

Swift as the hurrying shuttles go,

Only the figures vivid or dim

That flow from the hastening hands of him,

Only the fugitive shapes are we,

Wrought in the web of eternity. Odell Shepard

EVER of us be said

That we reluctant stood

As sullen children, and refused to dance

To the keen pipe that sounds across the fields of France.

Though shrill the note and wild,

Though hard the steps and slow,

The dancing floor defiled,

The measure full of woe,

And dread

The solemn figure that the dancers tread,

We faltered not. Of us, this word shall not be said.

Never of us be said

We had no war to wage,

Because our womanhood,

Because the weight of age,

Held us in servitude.

None sees us fight,

Yet we in the long night

Battle to give release

To all whom we must send to seek and die for peace.

When they have gone, we in a twilit place

Meet Terror face to face,