Page:All quiet along the Potomac and other poems.djvu/96

90 They walk beside us everywhere— In quiet glen, in crowded street, Wherever human hearts are borne About by busy human feet.

Still with their armor buckled on, Still fighting foes without, within, Life s warriors walk beside us here To battle wrong, and war with sin. No bugle-blast their deeds proclaims, No cannon booms for hero true, Where self, and wrong, before him slain Proclaim the deadly conflict through.

Pale, quiet faces pass us by, So strangely calm we wonder still Whence came the Lethean draught to them, What drops the waveless chalice fill. The scars they bear are not from sword, Nor rifle-ball, nor bayonet thrust; They are but lines on cheek and brow, Engraved by broken hope and trust.

In household duties, day by day, Where cares and sorrows mark the round, A feeble one may vict'ry win, May grasp and wear the starry crown; God strengthens still the weakest hand That grasps his weapon in His name— Self-love subdued, hot words held back, A victor's wreath may win and claim.