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Conrad Potter Aiken - The Wars and the Unknown SoldierConrad Potter Aiken - The Wars and the Unknown Soldier
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I Dry leaves, soldier, dry leaves, dead leaves; voices of leaves on the wind that  bears them to     destruction, impassioned prayer, impassioned hymn of delight of the gladly doomed to die. Stridor of beasts, stridor of men, praises of lust and battle, numberless as waves, the waves singing to the wind that bears them down. Under Osiris, him of the Egyptian priests, Osynmandyas the King, easward into Asia we passed, swarmed over Bactria, three thousand years before Christ. The history of war is the history of mankind. So many dead: look at them there in the dark, look at them going, the longest parade of all, the parade of the dead: between then and now, seven thousand million dead: dead on the filed of battle. The people which is not ready to guard its gods, and its household gods, with the     sword, who knows but it will find itself with nothing save honour to defend - ? Consider, soldier whatever name you go by, doughboy, dogface, marine or tommy. God`s mercenary consider our lot in the days if the single combat. You have been seen on the     seashore. In the offshore wind blown backward, a wavecrest windwhipped and quivering, borne helpless and     briefly to fall underfoot of an oncoming seawall, foam-     smothered, once more to recede, wind-thwarted again; thus     deathward the battle lines whelmed and divided. The darkling     battalions locked arms in chaos, the bravest, the heroes, kept in the forefront` and this line once broken, our army was done for. II In the new city of marble and bright stone, the city named for a captain; in the capital: under the solemn echoing dome, in the still tomb, lies an unknown soldier.* In the brown city, old and shabby, by the muddy Thames, in the gaunt     avenue where Romans blessed with Latin the oyster and the     primrose, the stone shaft speaks of another. Those who pass bare their heads in the rain, pausing to listen+ Across grey water, red poppies on cliffs and chalk. Hidden under the arch, in the city of light, the city beloved of Abelard rests a third, nameless as those, but the fluttering flame substituting for a name. Three unknown soldiers: three, let us say, out of many. On the proud arch names shine like stars, the names of battles and     victories; but never the name of the man, you, the unknown. Down there runs the river, under dark walls of rock, parapets of rock, stone steps that green to the water. There they fished up in the twilight another unknown, the one they call L`Inconnue de la Seine: drowned     hands, drowned hair, drowned eyes, masked like marble she     listens to the drip-drop secret of silence; and the pale eyelids enclose and disclose what they know, the illusion found like fire under Lethe. Devotion here sainted the love here deathless. The strong purpose turns from the daggered lamplight, from the little light to     the lesser, from stone to stone stepping, from the nex-to-the-lasy heartbeat and footstep even to the sacred, to the last. Love: devotion: sacrifice: death: can we call her     unknown who has not unknown to herself more? Whose love     lives still as if death itself were alive and divine? And you, the soldier you who are dead: is it not so with you? Love: devotion: sacrifice: death: can we call you     unknown, you who knew what you did?  The soldier is crystal: crystal of man: clear heart, clear duty, clear purpose. No soldier can be unknown. Only he is unknown who is unknown to himself.
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