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Home  »  An American Anthology, 1787–1900  »  830 In Memory of General Grant

Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.

By HenryAbbey

830 In Memory of General Grant

WHITE wings of commerce sailing far,

Hot steam that drives the weltering wheel,

Tamed lightning speeding on the wire,

Iron postman on the way of steel,—

These, circling all the world, have told

The loss that makes us desolate;

For we give back to dust this day

The God-sent man who saved the state.

When black the sky and dire with war,

When every heart was wrung with fear,

He rose serene, and took his place,

The great occasion’s mighty peer.

He smote armed opposition down,

He bade the storm and darkness cease,

And o’er the long-distracted land

Shone out the smiling sun of peace.

The famous captains of the past

March in review before the mind:

Some fought for glory, some for gold,

But most to yoke and rule mankind.

Not so the captain dead to-day,

For whom our half-mast banners wave:

He fought to keep the Union whole,

And break the shackles of the slave.

A silent man, in friendship true,

He made point-blank his certain aim,

And, born a stranger to defeat,

To steadfast purpose linked his name:

For while the angry flood of war

Surged down between its gloomy banks

He followed duty, with the mien

Of but a soldier in the ranks.

How well he wore white honor’s flower,

The gratitude and praise of men,

As General, as President,

And then as simple citizen!

He was a hero to the end:

The dark rebellion raised by Death

Against the Powers of Life and Light,

He battled hard, with failing breath.

O hero of Fort Donelson,

And wooded Shiloh’s frightful strife!

Sleep on! for honor loves the tomb

More than the garish ways of life.

Sleep on! sleep on! Thy wondrous life

Is freedom’s most illustrious page;

And fame shall loudly sound thy praise

In every clime, to every age.