Comrades Poem : The Guards Came Through and Other Poems by Arthur Conan Doyle
Comrades Poem
by
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Not published in the first edition of The Guards Came Through.
Comrades Poem
You can read their names in the list of games
In the school of long ago.
Henderson A. and Wilson J.
And Marriott W.0.
They ragged and fought as schoolboys ought,
And learned to play the game.
You can act the fool at an English school,
But it builds you all the same.
Verses you plan which fail to scan
And your French is none too good,
But you learn to shape as a gentleman,
And to do as a Briton should.
For there’s something there, in the sober air,
And the reek of the mellow place.
Which seems to hold the instincts old.
And the soul of an ancient race.
Where Latin and Greek are far to seek
There is home-made lore for you.
The thing that’s fair, and the thing that’s square,
And the thing no chap can do.
Gothic and grim, in the transept dim
Of the chapel grey and old
There’s a marbled shrine where line on line
The dead boys’ names are scrolled.
They gave their dreams of what might be
For the sake of the things that are,
When the joyous strife of their glad young life
Had changed to the strife of war.
But there they be, the comrades three,
As in the long ago,
Henderson A. and Wilson J.
And Marriott W.0.
The Guards Came Through and Other Poems
Victrix Poem
Those Others Poem
The Guards Came Through Poem
Haig Is Moving Poem
The Guns In Sussex Poem
Ypres Poem
Grousing Poem
The Volunteer Poem
The Night Patrol Poem
The Bugles Of Canada Poem
The Wreck On Loch Mcgarry Poem
The Bigot Poem
The Athabasca Trail Poem
Ragtime! Poem
Christmas In Trouble Poem
To Carlo Poem
To Ronald Ross Poem
Little Billy Poem
Take Heart Poem
Retrospect Poem
Comrades Poem
Lindisfaire Poem
Holy Grail A Parable Poem
Fate Poem