Robert Graves: Peace
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Anti-war essays, poems, short stories and literary excerpts
British writers on peace and war
Robert Graves: Selections on war
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Robert Graves
Peace
When that glad day shall break to match
“Before-the-War” with “Since-the-Peace”,
And up I climb to twist new thatch
Across my cottage roof, while geese
Stand stiffly there below and vex
The yard with hissing from long necks,
In that immense release,
That shining day, shall we hear said:
“New wars to-morrow, more men dead”?
When peace time comes and horror’s over,
Despair and darkness like a dream,
When fields are ripe with corn and clover,
The cool white dairy full of cream,
Shall we work happily in the sun,
And think “It’s over now and done”,
Or suddenly shall we seem
To watch a second bristling shadow
Of armed men move across the meadow?
Will it be over once for all,
With no more killed and no more maimed;
Shall we be safe from terror’s thrall,
The eagle caged, the lion tamed;
Or will the young of that vile brood,
The young ones also, suck up blood
Unconquered, unashamed,
Rising again with lust and thirst?
Better we all had died at first,
Better that killed before our prime
We rotted deep in earthy slime.
Recent Posts
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- Thomas Carlyle: Selections on war
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- Thomas Carlyle: Inept government’s sole achievement, getting together men to kill other men
- Iris Murdoch: The soldiers should all just throw down their arms
- Rasul Gamzatov: Lament for a slain brother
- Iris Murdoch: You don’t have to kill people fighting for social justice
- William Alexander: Cover’d with a bloody stain fields that once look’d pleasantly
- William Alexander: No sooner does peace descend than golden age of literature and poetry arises
- William Alexander: Of all calamities to which we may be destined, none is so baleful and destructive as war
- Julian Hawthorne: Why soldiers become prison guards
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- Horace P. Biddle: Wine, War, and Love
- Emily Gilmore Alden: The world should write more victories, the victories of love
- W. S. Walker: Furies learn’d to blush at human crimes
- W. S. Walker: One last sanguinary conquest
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- Herman Melville: Selections on peace and war
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- Joseph Conrad: Never before has war received so much homage at the lips of men
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- Mary Shelley: On peace and war
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- Joseph Conrad: From the frozen ground of battlefields a chorus of groans calls for vengeance from Heaven
- Mary Shelley: Men have slain each other by thousands, now man is a creature of price
- Mary Shelley: I turned to the corpse-strewn earth and felt ashamed of my species
- Mary Shelley: I do not sympathize in their dreams of massacre and glory
- Grant Allen: How can he be good if he hires himself out indiscriminately to kill or maim whoever he’s told to?
- W. R. Titterton: The Silent People of No Man’s Land
- Eunice Tietjens: Children of War
- Justin Martyr: We who formerly murdered one another now refrain from making war upon our enemies
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- Alice Cary: Better dwell the lowliest shepherd of Arcadia’s bowers
- Ella Wheeler Wilcox: When the Regiment Came Back
- Sven Delblanc: No, three megatons, it’s a question of moral principle
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- Nathaniel Hawthorne: War personified; red cheek emblem of fire and sword; blackness of other betokened mourning that attends them
- Victor Hugo: I prefer poet to marshals’ cannonade
- Herman Melville: In the solace of the Truce of God, the Calumet has come
- Heinrich Mann: “No! The less force exercised in the world the better!”
- Latin American writers on war and peace
- Mariano Picón-Salas: From dream of warlike soldiers to nightmare of flames and ashes
- Julio Ortega: The fall of the great warrior empires
- Ambrose Bierce: Military Malthusianism
- Marcel Moreau: Children playing at war, the actual weapon of a crime
- Ambrose Bierce: He created patriotism and taught the nations war
- Henry James: No more sacrifice on the altar of war
- George Frederick Cameron: Is it true greatness to lead armed hirelings on to bleed?
- Percy Bysshe Shelley: War and the decline of poetry
- Roger Nimier: Selections on war
- Sydney Dobell: The Army Surgeon
- Wilfrid Scawen Blunt: “How I am wounded for thee in these wars”
- Roger Nimier: Sacrificial lambs whose howls could be heard from the Atlantic Ocean to the Caspian Sea
- Roger Nimier: Those who fall in love with war will surely die in her arms
- Martial: So have fallen men
- Roger Nimier: Soldiers are like that
- Livy: Waging war against all rights human and divine
- Roger Nimier: I saw war in its stark reality
- Sallust: One may become famous in peace as well as in war
- Roger Nimier: Thankful for divine justice: a horrible wound rewarded me for all the harm I had done
- George Edward Woodberry: American I am; would wars were done!
- Grenville Mellen: The Lonely Bugle Grieves
- Edward Bulwer Lytton: Selections on peace and war
- Edward Bulwer Lytton: “We poor men have no passion for war”
- Edward Bulwer Lytton: War and wrath and rapine cease, O Messenger of Peace!
- Thomas Carlyle: Fighting with steel murder-tools
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- Joseph Roth: His son was dead. His world had ended.
- Joseph Roth: Black and red, death fluttered over them
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