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Classic poem

The New School

by Joyce Kilmer

(For My Mother)

The halls that were loud with the merry tread of

young and careless feet

Are still with a stillness that is too drear to seem like holiday,

And never a gust of laughter breaks the calm of the dreaming street

Or rises to shake the ivied walls and frighten the doves away.

The dust is on book and on empty desk, and the

tennis-racquet and balls

Lie still in their lonely locker and wait for a game that is never

played,

And over the study and lecture-room and the river and meadow falls

A stern peace, a strange peace, a peace that War has made.

For many a youthful shoulder now is gay with an

epaulet,

And the hand that was deft with a cricket-bat is defter with a sword,

And some of the lads will laugh to-day where the trench is red and

wet,

And some will win on the bloody field the accolade of the Lord.

They have taken their youth and mirth away

from the study and playing-ground

To a new school in an alien land beneath an alien sky;

Out in the smoke and roar of the fight their lessons and games are

found,

And they who were learning how to live are learning how to die.

And after the golden day has come and the war is

at an end,

A slab of bronze on the chapel wall will tell of the noble dead.

And every name on that radiant list will be the name of a friend,

A name that shall through the centuries in grateful prayers be said.

And there will be ghosts in the old school,

brave ghosts with laughing eyes,

On the field with a ghostly cricket-bat, by the stream with a ghostly

rod;

They will touch the hearts of the living with a flame that sanctifies,

A flame that they took with strong young hands

from the altar-fires of God.

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