Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
The Sack of Magdeburg
By William Maginn (17941842)
W
Bold we mounted to the attack;
Five times the assault was made,
Four times were we beaten back.
Many a gallant comrade fell;
In the desperate mêlée there
Sped their spirits ill or well,
Know I not nor do I care.
O’er the dying and the dead;
Hot the western sunbeam glowed,
Sinking in a blaze of red.
Redder in the gory way
Our deep-plashing footsteps sank,
As the cry of “Slay, slay, slay!”
Echoed fierce from rank to rank.
Slew them with unpitying sword;
Negligently could we do
The commanding of the Lord?
Fled the coward, fought the brave,
Wailed the mother, wept the child;
But not one escaped the glaive,—
Man who frowned, or babe who smiled.
When the morning sun arose;
Lived not thrice three hundred when
Sunk that sun at evening close.
Then we spread the wasting flame,
Fanned to fury by the wind;
Of the city,—but the name
Nothing more is left behind!
Lowly shed and soaring spire,
Fell in that victorious hour
Which consigned the town to fire.
All that rose at craftsman’s call
To its pristine dust had gone,
For inside the shattered wall
Left we never stone on stone.—
All it had to yield of spoil;
Should not brave soldadoes have
Some rewarding for their toil?
What the villain sons of trade
Had amassed by years of care,
Prostrate at our bidding laid,
By one moment won, was there.
Mid the steaming heaps of dead,
Cheered by sounds of hostile moan,
Did we the joyous banquet spread.
Laughing loud and quaffing long,
With our glorious labors o’er;
To the sky our jocund song
Told the city was no more!