The
Things that make a Soldier Great
Edgar
A. Guest
The things
that make a soldier great and send him out to die,
To face the flaming
cannon’s mouth nor ever question why,
Are lilacs by a little
porch, the row of tulips red,
The peonies and pansies,
too, the old petunia bed,
The grass plot where his
children play, the roses on the wall:
’Tis these that make a
soldier great. He’s fighting for them all.
’Tis not the pomp and
pride of kings that make a soldier brave;
’Tis not allegiance to
the flag that over him may wave;
For soldiers never fight so
well on land or on the foam
As when behind the cause
they see the little place called home.
Endanger but that humble
street whereon his children run,
You make a soldier of the
man who never bore a gun.
What is it through the
battle smoke the valiant soldier sees?
The little garden far away,
the budding apple trees,
The little patch of ground
back there, the children at their play,
Perhaps a tiny mound behind
the simple church of gray.
The golden thread of
courage isn’t linked to castle dome
But to the spot, where’er
it be - the humble spot called home.
And now the lilacs bud
again and all is lovely there
And homesick soldiers far
away know spring is in the air;
The tulips come to bloom
again, the grass once more is green,
And every man can see the
spot where all his joys have been.
He sees his children smile
at him, he hears the bugle call,
And only death can stop him
now - he’s fighting for them all.