dots-menu
×

Home  »  An American Anthology, 1787–1900  »  928 The Lost Colors

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

By Elizabeth Stuart PhelpsWard

928 The Lost Colors

FROWNING, the mountain stronghold stood,

Whose front no mortal could assail;

For more than twice three hundred years

The terror of the Indian vale.

By blood and fire the robber band

Answered the helpless village wail.

Hot was his heart and cool his thought,

When Napier from his Englishmen

Up to the bandits’ rampart glanced,

And down upon his ranks again.

Summoned to dare a deed like that,

Which of them all would answer then?

What sullen regiment is this

That lifts its eyes to dread Cutchee?

Abased, its standard bears no flag.

For thus the punishment shall be

That England metes to Englishmen

Who shame her once by mutiny.

From out the disgraced Sixty-Fourth

There stepped a hundred men of might.

Cried Napier: “Now prove to me

I read my soldiers’ hearts aright!

Form! Forward! Charge, my volunteers!

Your colors are on yonder height!”

So sad is shame, so wise is trust!

The challenge echoed bugle-clear.

Like fire along the Sixty-Fourth

From rank to file rang cheer on cheer.

In death and glory up the pass

They fought for all to brave men dear.

Old is the tale, but read anew

In every warring human heart.

What rebel hours, what coward shame,

Upon the aching memory start!

To find the ideal forfeited,

—What tears can teach the holy art?

Thou great Commander! leading on

Through weakest darkness to strong light;

By any anguish, give us back

Our life’s young standard, pure and bright.

O fair, lost Colors of the soul!

For your sake storm we any height.