Fair broke the day among the georgian mountains;
 The mists, not chill nor raw,
But soft and warm, like spray from summer fountains,
 Hung round old Kenesaw.
And vast and billowy as the face of ocean
 The white fog lay below,
From whose expanse, with every shifting motion,
 As from a sea of snow,
The lesser peaks arose like isles volcanic-
 Lost Mountain, Pine Hill; far
To south, Stone Mountain gleamed an alp Titanic,
 Whose glory noon should mar.
Nor did the fleecy legions show surrender
 Till up the sunlight rolled
And filled the floating isles with matchless spendor,
 The cloudy sea with gold.
When round our lotty height of observation
 We saw the prospect clear,
The frail battalions with precipitation
 Retreat and disappear,
Our station called the next, our view repeating
 The distant posts to tell;
From the Gate City came reply and greeting,
 Flag-spoken: "All is well"
It was the month when scarlet banners, flying
 From every summer tree,
Proclaim, as heroes oft in death, that dying
 sublimer life may be.
And where the bristling abatis defended
 The rifle-pits in line,
An oriflamme, with golden lustre splendid,
 Blazed the dead mountain-pine.
While far beneath, with homes and haunts civilian,
 Rose Marietta's walls;
Shone white against the autumn groves vermilion
 Her tented hospitals.
To north - is that dark mass the shadows creeping
 Along the valley bed?
Are those the grooves that hasten onward, sweeping
 With swift and swinging tread?
O Talking Flag, thy worth if ever proving,
 We hail the distant glass;
Atlanta heard:  "The foe at Acworth, moving on Allatoona Pass."
The Pass! from distant Chattanooga winding
 Along the iron way,
The laden trains, to far Atlanta finding
 Through it their southward way,
Bore the Great General food and war's munitions,
 Until his great decree
That marched an army, spite of war's traditions,
 Through Georgia to the sea.
Quick came the answer -"Signal for assistance
 To General Corse at Rome;
Let the Pass garrison show firm resistance
 Till reinforcements come -"
No hope that fleetest courier madly riding
 Could cross the path they strode
The electric wires, as though our fate deciding,
 Trailed speechless in the road.
But on our viewless telegraph the saving
 And weighty order sped;
The baffled rebel helpless watched us waving
 The magic white-and-red.
The desperate charge, the stern repulse, the ending
 Of all his brilliant plan -
(For Corse's veterans stood the fort defending
 Before the fight began)-
We saw; our hearts' intenser beat compelling
 Our very breath to lag;
Enough when rose the signal, victory telling
 And Sherman thanked the Flag.
On that red field its swift dispatch had aided
 Where brave McPherson fell;
Where Smith's and Leggett's heroes enfiladed
 Defied the shot and shell,
And held - till night withdrew the foe - undaunted,
 The triangle of fire,
Our flag, above the shattered breast-works planted,
 Beheld his hosts retire.
Strange charm is thine, mysterious dweller
 In heaven's clear upper air!
The windy Zeus, the Cloud-and-Storm-Compeller
 Resigns his empire there.
The lines that march deploying through the valleys
 Advance and then retreat,
The impetuous mass that up the hill-side sallies
 Columns that part and meet -
Thine is their purpose and their destination;
 Thy stroke their guiding hand,
Whose gestures link in close communication
 Commander and command.
In kindred service shine thy torches flaming
 Above the midnight camps;
The dusky soldier wondering sees them, shaming
 The sky's remoter lamps.
Their fiery glow the distant darkness lighting
 His simple spirit awes,
And seems the stars within their courses fighting
 Against the slaver's cause.
Yet safe thy secrets; vain the foeman's presage?
 Of what thy words prtend;
While even the practised flagman waves the message
 He does not comprehend.
Thy work is done; along Virgina's river
 No more thy signal flies;
From Georgia's hills by night no more the quiver
 Of thy red torch shall rise.
There came a noon when from the bastions frowning
 Of every fort and bay,
Flung out a banner; hurrying on and crowning
 The mountains far away.
It left undecked no hamlet's little steeple
 That loud with joy-bells rung;
And from the breasts of a too-happy people
 Its passion-flowers were hung.
We knew its language; knew our work was over;
 And hailed, while ours we furled,
The only Flag whose sovereign folds shall cover
 Henceforth our Western world.
It said: "For no poor vaunt of wide dominions
 I threw the gage of war;
Through all the fearful fight may rosy pinions
 The hope of ages bore.
"Ye say Greece fought for liberty; her story
 Still lights the student's cheek;
And all her scenery seems a field of glory
 From which her heroes speak.
"But ask the Helot, when her banners floating
 Through most pellucid air,
Came home, o'er Persian downfall gloating,
 How much his race might share?
"Rome's boasted standard righted wrongs patrician
 Where'er its eagles flew;
What recked her haughty loards of their conditions
 Who no proud lineage knew?
"From nameless graves along the blue Egean,
 From Asian temples prone,
From Romans hearths in buried homes Pompeiian,
 From Eqypt's mystic stone,
"I heard the voice of Time, in solemn warning,
 Pronounce the words of ban;
'I build the sepulchres of nations scorning
 The rights of man as man.'
"I learned their lesson; not to strength or beauty
 I pledge a special grace;
No wider stretch of my protecting duty
 To birth or caste or race.
"As much oppressor as oppressed to better
 I bade war's thunders roll,
Since who has learned to view unmoved a fetter
 Has lost the freeman's soul.
"O lowly worker in the fields of cotton,
 Great king of sword or pen,
I yield you both, your lesser claims forgotten,
 The equal rights of men;
"The old republic, purified and guided
 As once its founders planned;
To hold forever one and undivided
 Our common Fatherland;
"For this I fought; the nations, silent, eying
 The dreadful struggle, stood;
The land of Milton coldly blamed, denying
 The need of war or blood.
"She stretched across the ocean intervening
 No cordial hand of friend,
But said, 'It is an awful strife, whose meaning
 I do not comprehend.'
"True, what significance to her, whose treasure
 Were claims of acient birth,
Had our great conflict, waged those claims to measure
 By man's intrinsic worth?
"The cause in which her Hampden died forgetting,
 To her the haughty pride
Of Southern cavalier, his slaves regretting,
 More nearly seemed allied.
"What better proof than this her barons offered,
 That through their present runs
The spirit that in Magna Charta proffered
 Small boon to peasants' sons.
"For well I hold my higher code forever
 From careless readers sealed;
The Signal Flag of Liberty has never
 Her symbols yet revealed,
"Unless to hearts of generous thoughts prolific,
 And they alone combine
The secret disk, the stroke hieroglyphic,
 The hidden countersign.
"And those in whom my trumpet's loud appealing
 No martial ardor woke,
Who listless saw my color-bearer reeling
 Amidst the battle smoke -
"Who heaped their sordid gains with tearless faces
 Through scenes that angels thrilled,
And shunned the broken ranks whose empty places
 A braver host had filled;
"To them my bugle notes to combat calling
 In foreign accents rung;
On their dull ears my million voices falling
 Rehearsed an unknown tongue;
"But nobler souls, the heights of thought commanding,
 In purer atmosphere,
Above the sulphurous mists of passion standing,
 Leaned down with words of cheer.
"O poet, sage, whose broader view extending
 Above the cloudy plain.
Descried each hostile infuence impending,
 With warning not in vain!
"O woman, loyal and clear-sighted, merging
 Your dearest hopes in mine,
From lonely mounts of self-forgetting urging
 Your sacrifice divine!
"Not less your work than theirs whose valor daunted
 The fiery front of War;
And yours the peerless laurels only granted
 To Freedom's Signal Corps.
And thou, O mother! for a soldier weeping
 By far Potomac laid,
Or distant Chattahoochee, swiftly leaping
 Athwart its chestnut shade,
"Lament him not; no love could make immortal
 The span that we call life;
And never hero entered heavenly portal
 Through fields of grander strife;
"And glories brighter than heraldic splendors
 His kindred's house may claim;
That when I call the roll of my defenders
 My lips shall speak his name."
|