Thomas William Hodgson Crosland

Thomas William Hodgson Crosland Poems

What tale is this which stirs a world of knaves
Out of its grubbing to throw greasy pence
Forth to the hat, and choke with eloquence
...

MOUNTING his stairs of azure and of gold,
The English lark sings in the August weather
For joy which knoweth neither tie nor tether
...

The Best Poem Of Thomas William Hodgson Crosland

Antarctic

What tale is this which stirs a world of knaves
Out of its grubbing to throw greasy pence
Forth to the hat, and choke with eloquence
In boastful prose and verse of doubtful staves?
Four men have died, gentlemen, heroes, braves;
Snows wrap them round eternally. From thence
They may no more return to life or sense
And a steel moon aches down on their chill graves.

'They died for England.' It is excellent
To die for England. Death is oft the prize
Of him who bears the burden and the load.
So with a glory let our lives be spent --
We may be noble in the Minories
And die for England in the Camden Road.

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