Robert W. Service

The Mourners

I look into the aching womb of night;
I look across the mist that masks the dead;
The moon is tired and gives but little light,
The stars have gone to bed.
 
The earth is sick and seems to breathe with pain;
A lost wind whimpers in a mangled tree;
I do not see the foul, corpse—cluttered plain,
The dead I do not see.
 
The slain I would not see . . . and so I lift
My eyes from out the shambles where they lie;
When lo! a million woman—faces drift
Like pale leaves through the sky.
 
The cheeks of some are channelled deep with tears;
But some are tearless, with wild eyes that stare
Into the shadow of the coming years
Of fathomless despair.
 
And some are young, and some are very old;
And some are rich, some poor beyond belief;
Yet all are strangely like, set in the mould
Of everlasting grief.
 
They fill the vast of Heaven, face on face;
And then I see one weeping with the rest,
Whose eyes beseech me for a moment’s space. . . .
Oh eyes I love the best!
 
Nay, I but dream. The sky is all forlorn,
And there’s the plain of battle writhing red:
God pity them, the women—folk who mourn!
How happy are the dead!
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