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Home  »  The English Poets  »  The Forced Recruit. Solferino, 1859

Thomas Humphry Ward, ed. The English Poets. 1880–1918.rnVol. IV. The Nineteenth Century: Wordsworth to Rossetti

Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806–1861)

The Forced Recruit. Solferino, 1859

IN the ranks of the Austrian you found him,

He died with his face to you all;

Yet bury him here where around him

You honour your bravest that fall.

Venetian, fair-featured and slender,

He lies shot to death in his youth,

With a smile on his lips, over-tender

For any mere soldier’s dead mouth.

No stranger, and yet not a traitor,

Though alien the cloth on his breast,

Underneath it how seldom a greater

Young heart, has a shot sent to rest!

By your enemy tortured and goaded

To march with them, stand in their file,

His musket (see) never was loaded,

He facing your guns with that smile!

As orphans yearn on to their mothers,

He yearned to your patriot bands;—

‘Let me die for our Italy, brothers,

If not in your ranks, by your hands!

‘Aim straightly, fire steadily! spare me

A ball in the body which may

Deliver my heart here, and tear me

This badge of the Austrian away!’

So thought he, so died he this morning.

What then? many others have died.

Ay, but easy for men to die scorning

The death-stroke, who fought side by side:—

One tricolor floating above them;

Struck down ’mid triumphant acclaims

Of an Italy rescued to love them

And blazon the brass with their names.

But he—without witness or honour,

There, shamed in his country’s regard,

With the tyrants who march in upon her,

Died faithful and passive: ’t was hard.

’T was sublime. In a cruel restriction

Cut off from the guerdon of sons,

With most filial obedience, conviction,

His soul kissed the lips of her guns.

That moves you? Nay, grudge not to show it,

While digging a grave for him here:

The others who died, says your poet,

Have glory,—let him have a tear.