Page:Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War.djvu/104

96 The Indian has passed away,

But creeping comes another—

''Deadlier far. Picket,''

Take heed—take heed of thy brother!

From a wood-hung height, an outpost lone,

Crowned with a woodman's fort,

The sentinel looks on a land of dole,

Like Paran, all amort.

Black chimneys, gigantic in moor-like wastes,

The scowl of the clouded sky retort;

The hearth is a houseless stone again—

Ah! where shall the people be sought?

Since the venom such blastment deals,

The south should have paused, and thrice,

Ere with heat of her hate she hatched

The egg with the cockatrice.

A path down the mountain winds to the glade

Where the dead of the Moonlight Fight lie low;

A hand reaches out of the thin-laid mould

As begging help which none can bestow.