A TREASURY OF WAR POETRY
British And American Poems Of The World War 1914-1917
Edited, With Introduction And Notes,
By
GEORGE HERBERT CLARKE
Copyright © 2016 Read Books Ltd.
This book is copyright and may not be
reproduced or copied in any way without
the express permission of the publisher in writing
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Contents
Introduction To The World War One Centenary Series
A Timeline Of The Major Events Of World War One In Europe
Memoirs, Diaries And Poems Of World War One
Occasional Notes, Indexes, Acknowledgments
“Liberty Enlightening The World”
To The United States Of America
Abraham Lincoln Walks At Midnight
“For All We Have And Are”
England To Free Men
Pro Patria
Lines Written In Surrey, 1917
France
The Name Of France
Vive La France!
The Soul Of Jeanne D’arc
O Glorious France
To France
Place De La Concorde
To France
Qui Vive?
To The Belgians
Belgium
To Belgium
To Belgium In Exile
The Wife Of Flanders
Russia—America
To Russia New And Free
Italy In Arms
On The Italian Front, Mcmxvi
Australia To England
Canada To England
Langemarck At Ypres
Canadians
The Kaiser And Belgium
The Battle Of Liège
Men Of Verdun
Verdun
Guns Of Verdun
The Spires Of Oxford
Oxford In War-Time
Oxford Revisited In War-Time
Sonnets Written In The Fall Of 1914
The War Films
The Searchlights
Christmas: 1915
“Men Who March Away”
We Willed It Not
The Death Of Peace
In War-Time
The Anvil
The Fool Rings His Bells
The Road To Dieppe
To Fellow Travellers In Greece
“When There Is Peace”
A Prayer In Time Of War
Then And Now
The Kaiser And God
The Superman
Three Hills
The Return
The Mobilization In Brittany
The Toy Band
(A Song Of The Great Retreat)
Thomas Of The Light Heart
In The Trenches
The Guards Came Through
The Passengers Of A Retarded Submersible
Edith Cavell
The Hell-Gate Of Soissons
The Virgin Of Albert
Retreat
A Letter From The Front
Rheims Cathedral—1914
I Have A Rendezvous With Death….
The Soldier
Expectans Expectavi
The Volunteer
Into Battle
The Cricketers Of Flanders
“All The Hills And Vales Along”