Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
Lorraine
By Frederick K. Crosby (18451874)Over the hills of fair Lorraine,
O’er rose-wreathed cottage and ivied wall;
Than the holy night of St. Genevieve,
Over the banks of the blue Moselle.
Spangles with sheen the clustered vines,
On midnight tresses and golden hair.
Mingle in tender lovingness,
Marie and Jean, and their hearts are one!
“Marie, the Saint’s sweet day is past,
Where shall we be on New Year’s day?”
Hand met hand with sudden start,
The vision fair of a little cot
Waiting the blissful bridal day.
Their hearts rose up in solemn prayer;
Over the banks of the blue Moselle,
Marie and Jean, and their hearts were one!
And the sun is shining on New Year’s day.
Heaps of ashes, and rows of slain;
The angry tramp of the red hussar
The direful notes of the dance of death!
The sentry’s glittering sabre shines;
Rain of rocket and storm of shell!
Crowned with masses of midnight hair?
Dead on Verdun’s leaguered wall.
Ask the blackened walls of Gravelotte.
A maid whose heart is turned to stone;
And meekly prays that her time may come.
And war’s black eagle screams afar!
Over the hills of sad Lorraine.