10 Best Famous Firing Line Poems

Here is a collection of the top 10 all-time best famous Firing Line poems. This is a select list of the best famous Firing Line poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Firing Line poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of firing line poems.

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Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Memoir

 We look on the shoulders filling the stage of the Chicago Auditorium.

A fat mayor has spoken much English and the mud of his speech is crossed with quicksilver hisses elusive and rapid from floor and gallery.

A neat governor speaks English and the listeners ring chimes to his clear thoughts.

Joffre speaks a few words in French; this is a voice of the long firing line that runs from the salt sea dunes of Flanders to the white spear crags of the Swiss mountains.

This is the man on whose yes and no has hung the death of battalions and brigades; this man speaks of the tricolor of his country now melted in a great resolve with the starred bunting of Lincoln and Washington.

This is the hero of the Marne, massive, irreckonable; he lets tears roll down his cheek; they trickle a wet salt off his chin onto the blue coat.

There is a play of American hands and voices equal to sea-breakers and a lift of white sun on a stony beach.

Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

Scots of the Riverina

 The boy cleared out to the city from his home at harvest time -- 
They were Scots of the Riverina, and to run from home was a crime. 
The old man burned his letters, the first and last he burned, 
And he scratched his name from the Bible when the old wife's back was turned. 

A year went past and another. There were calls from the firing-line; 
They heard the boy had enlisted, but the old man made no sign. 
His name must never be mentioned on the farm by Gundagai -- 
They were Scots of the Riverina with ever the kirk hard by. 

The boy came home on his "final", and the township's bonfire burned. 
His mother's arms were about him; but the old man's back was turned. 
The daughters begged for pardon till the old man raised his hand -- 
A Scot of the Riverina who was hard to understand. 

The boy was killed in Flanders, where the best and bravest die. 
There were tears at the Grahame homestead and grief in Gundagai; 
But the old man ploughed at daybreak and the old man ploughed till the mirk --
There were furrows of pain in the orchard while his housefolk went to the kirk. 

The hurricane lamp in the rafters dimly and dimly burned; 
And the old man died at the table when the old wife's back was turned. 
Face down on his bare arms folded he sank with his wild grey hair 
Outspread o'er the open Bible and a name re-written there.
Written by William Topaz McGonagall | Create an image from this poem

The Battle of Omdurman

 Ye Sons of Great Britain! come join with me
And King in praise of the gallant British Armie,
That behaved right manfully in the Soudan,
At the great battle of Omdurman. 

'Twas in the year of 1898, and on the 2nd of September,
Which the Khalifa and his surviving followers will long remember,
Because Sir Herbert Kitchener has annihilated them outright,
By the British troops and Soudanese in the Omdurman fight. 

The Sirdar and his Army left the camp in grand array,
And marched on to Omdurman without delay,
Just as the brigades had reached the crest adjoining the Nile,
And became engaged with the enemy in military style. 

The Dervishes had re-formed under cover of a rocky eminence,
Which to them, no doubt, was a strong defence,
And they were massed together in battle array
Around the black standard of the Khalifa, which made a grand display. 

But General Maxwell's Soudanese brigade seized the eminence in a short time,
And General Macdonald's brigade then joined the firing line;
And in ten minutes, long before the attack could be driven home,
The flower of the Khalifa's army was almost overthrown. 

Still manfully the dusky warriors strove to make headway,
But the Soudanese troops and British swept them back without dismay,
And their main body were mown down by their deadly fire-
But still the heroic Dervishes refused to retire. 

And defiantly they planted their standards and died by them,
To their honour be it said, just like brave men;
But at last they retired, with their hearts full of woe,
Leaving the field white with corpses, like a meadow dotted with snow. 

The chief heroes in the fight were the 21st Lancers;
They made a brilliant charge on the enemy with ringing cheers,
And through the dusky warriors bodies their lances they did thrust,
Whereby many of them were made to lick the dust. 

Then at a quarter past eleven the Sirdar sounded the advance,
And the remnant of the Dervishes fled, which was their only chance,
While the cavalry cut off their retreat while they ran;
Then the Sirdar, with the black standard of the Khalifa, headed for Omdurman. 

And when the Khalifa saw his noble army cut down,
With rage and grief he did fret and frown;
Then he spurred his noble steed, and swiftly it ran,
While inwardly to himself he cried, "Catch me if you can!" 

And Mahdism now has received a crushing blow,
For the Khalifa and his followers have met with a complete overthrow;
And General Gordon has been avenged, the good Christian,
By the defeat of the Khalifa at the battle of Omdurman. 

Now since the Khalifa has been defeated and his rule at an end,
Let us thank God that fortunately did send
The brave Sir Herbert Kitchener to conquer that bad man,
The inhuman Khalifa, and his followers at the battle of Omdurman. 

Success to Sir Herbert Kitchener! he is a great commander,
And as skilful in military tactics as the great Alexander,
Because he devised a very wise plan,
And by it has captured the town of Omdurman. 

I wish success to the British and Soudanese Army,
May God protect them by land and by sea,
May he enable them always to conquer the foe,
And to establish what's right wherever they go.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

That V.C

 'Twas in the days of front attack; 
This glorious truth we'd yet to learn it -- 
That every "front" has got a back. 
And French was just the man to turn it. 
A wounded soldier on the ground 
Was lying hid behind a hummock; 
He proved the good old proverb sound -- 
An army travels on its stomach. 

He lay as flat as any fish; 
His nose had worn a little furrow; 
He only had one frantic wish, 
That like an ant-bear he could burrow. 

The bullets whistled into space, 
The pom-pom gun kept up its braying, 
The fout-point-seven supplied the bass -- 
You'd think the devil's band was playing. 

A valiant comrade crawling near 
Observed his most supine behaviour, 
And crept towards him; "Hey! what cheer? 
Buck up," said he, "I've come to save yer. 

"You get up on my shoulders, mate, 
And, if we live beyond the firing, 
I'll get the V.C. sure as fate, 
Because our blokes is all retiring. 

"It's fifty pound a year," says he, 
"I'll stand you lots of beer and whisky." 
"No," says the wounded man, "not me, 
I'll not be saved -- it's far too risky. 

"I'm fairly safe behind this mound, 
I've worn a hole that seems to fit me; 
But if you lift me off the ground 
It's fifty pounds to one they'll hit me." 

So back towards the firing-line 
Our friend crept slowly to the rear-oh! 
Remarking "What a selfish swine! 
He might have let me be a hero."
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