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| THIS is the ballad of Langemarck, | |
| A story of glory and might; | |
| Of the vast Hun horde, and Canadas part | |
| In the great grim fight. | |
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| It was April fair on the Flanders Fields, | 5 |
| But the dreadest April then | |
| That ever the years, in their fateful flight, | |
| Had brought to this world of men. | |
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| North and east, a monster wall, | |
| The mighty Hun ranks lay, | 10 |
| With fort on fort, and iron-ringed trench, | |
| Menacing, grim and gray. | |
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| And south and west, like a serpent of fire, | |
| Serried the British lines, | |
| And in between, the dying and dead, | 15 |
| And the stench of blood, and the trampled mud, | |
| On the fair, sweet Belgian vines. | |
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| And far to the eastward, harnessed and taut, | |
| Like a scimitar, shining and keen, | |
| Gleaming out of that ominous gloom, | 20 |
| Old Frances hosts were seen. | |
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| When out of the grim Hun lines one night, | |
| There rolled a sinister smoke; | |
| A strange, weird cloud, like a pale, green shroud, | |
| And death lurked in its cloak. | 25 |
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| On a fiend-like wind it curled along | |
| Over the brave French ranks, | |
| Like a monster tree its vapours spread, | |
| In hideous, burning banks | |
| Of poisonous fumes that scorched the night | 30 |
| With their sulphurous demon danks. | |
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| And men went mad with horror, and fled | |
| From that terrible, strangling death, | |
| That seemed to sear both body and soul | |
| With its baleful, flaming breath. | 35 |
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| Till even the little dark men of the south, | |
| Who feared neither God nor man, | |
| Those fierce, wild fighters of Africs steppes, | |
| Broke their battalions and ran: | |
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| Ran as they never had run before, | 40 |
| Gasping, and fainting for breath; | |
| For they knew t was no human foe that slew; | |
| And that hideous smoke meant death. | |
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| Then red in the reek of that evil cloud, | |
| The Hun swept over the plain; | 45 |
| And the murderers dirk did its monster work, | |
| Mid the scythe-like shrapnel rain; | |
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| Till it seemed that at last the brute Hun hordes | |
| Had broken that wall of steel; | |
| And that soon, through this breach in the freemans dyke, | 50 |
| His trampling hosts would wheel; | |
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| And sweep to the south in ravaging might, | |
| And Europes peoples again | |
| Be trodden under the tyrants heel, | |
| Like herds, in the Prussian pen. | 55 |
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| But in that line on the British right, | |
| There massed a corps amain, | |
| Of men who hailed from a far west land | |
| Of mountain and forest and plain; | |
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| Men new to war and its dreadest deeds, | 60 |
| But noble and staunch and true; | |
| Men of the open, East and West, | |
| Brew of old Britains brew. | |
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| These were the men out there that night, | |
| When Hell loomed close ahead; | 65 |
| Who saw that pitiful, hideous rout, | |
| And breathed those gases dread; | |
| While some went under and some went mad; | |
| But never a man there fled. | |
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| For the word was Canada, theirs to fight, | 70 |
| And keep on fighting still; | |
| Britain said, fight, and fight they would, | |
| Though the Devil himself in sulphurous mood | |
| Came over that hideous hill. | |
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| Yea, stubborn, they stood, that hero band, | 75 |
| Where no soul hoped to live; | |
| For five, gainst eighty thousand men, | |
| Were hopeless odds to give. | |
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| Yea, fought they on! T was Friday eve, | |
| When that demon gas drove down; | 80 |
| T was Saturday eve that saw them still | |
| Grimly holding their own; | |
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| Sunday, Monday, saw them yet, | |
| A steadily lessening band, | |
| With no surrender in their hearts, | 85 |
| But the dream of a far-off land, | |
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| Where mother and sister and love would weep | |
| For the hushed heart lying still; | |
| But never a thought but to do their part, | |
| And work the Empires will. | 90 |
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| Ringed round, hemmed in, and back to back, | |
| They fought there under the dark, | |
| And won for Empire, God and Right, | |
| At grim, red Langemarck. | |
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| Wonderful battles have shaken this world, | 95 |
| Since the Dawn-God overthrew Dis; | |
| Wonderful struggles of right against wrong, | |
| Sung in the rhymes of the worlds great song, | |
| But never a greater than this. | |
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| Bannockburn, Inkerman, Balaclava, | 100 |
| Marathons godlike stand; | |
| But never a more heroic deed, | |
| And never a greater warrior breed, | |
| In any war-mans land. | |
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| This is the ballad of Langemarck, | 105 |
| A story of glory and might; | |
| Of the vast Hun horde, and Canadas part | |
| In the great, grim fight. | |
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