Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: MEMORIAL DAY AT ANDERSONVILLE, 1884. O Comrades, on each lonely grave we place one flower to-day, More sweet than any that shall bloom upon the heart of May; More flush in blue and crimson, with starry splendor crowned, Because the thunders raged above, the darkness hemmed around ; The flower that our fathers saw, an hundred years before, A tiny tendril springing by the lonely cabin door ; 'Twas sown in fears, 'twas wet with tears, till, lo, it burst in view, The symbol of a Nation's hopes the Red, the White, the Blue. Ah, not in anger, not in strife, we come with laden hands ; The crimson retinues of War are off in other lands;We bring the blossoms we have nursed to shed their honeyed breath Where erst the reeling ranks of wrath unbarred the gates of death; We lift the dear dead faces of our heroes to the light, We raise the pallid hands of theirs, we clasp and hold them tight; We say : O brothers, rise and see the Peace you helped to woo, Whose snowy pinions hover o'er the Red, the White, the Blue. Not yours, O silent comrades, the ecstacy of strife, The haughty exaltation that rounds the hero's life ; Not yours the flash of sabers, the shouts of the advance, The gleam of thrusting bayonets that shiver as they glance; Not yours upon the parapet your banner to unfurl, To die with victory on your lips, as back your feet they hurl ; The whisper of a kindling hope, while gaily over The silken folds are dancing out the Red, the White, the Blue. Nay, to your homesick vision the mask of Death was up, His icy breath was round you, his draught was in the cup ; A terror walks at noonday ; the dreams that throng the night But take the wings of morning and vanish ere the light. But oh, our fallen heroes,...