Page:Rudyard Kipling's verse - Inclusive Edition 1885-1918.djvu/261

 Earth, where we rode to slay or be slain, Our love shall redeem unto life. We will gather and lead to her lips again The waters of ancient strife, From the far and fiercely guarded streams And the pools where we lay in wait, Till the corn cover our evil dreams And the young corn our hate.

And when we bring old fights to mind, We will not remember the sin— If there be blood on his head of my kind, Or blood on my head of his kin— For the ungrazed upland, the unfilled lea Cry, and the fields forlorn: "The dead must bury their dead, but ye— Ye serve an host unborn."

Bless then, Our God, the new-yoked plough And the good beasts that draw, And the bread we eat in the sweat of our brow According to Thy Law. After us cometh a multitude— Prosper the work of our hands, That we may feed with our land's food The folk of all our lands!

Here, in the waves and the troughs of the plains, Where the healing stillness lies, And the vast, benignant sky restrains And the long days make wise— Bless to our use the rain and the sun And the blind seed in its bed, That we may repair the wrong that was done To the living and the dead!