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    The March to the Sea

    by Herman Melville
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    (December, 1864.)

    Not Kenesaw high-arching,
    Nor Allatoona's glen--
    Though there the graves lie parching--
    Stayed Sherman's miles of men;
    From charred Atlanta marching
    They launched the sword again.
    The columns streamed like rivers
    Which in their course agree,
    And they streamed until their flashing
    Met the flashing of the sea:
    It was glorious glad marching,
    That marching to the sea.

    The brushed the foe before them
    (Shall gnats impede the bull?);
    Their own good bridges bore them
    Over swamps or torrents full,
    And the grand pines waving o'er them
    Bowed to axes keen and cool.
    The columns grooved their channels.
    Enforced their own decree,
    And their power met nothing larger
    Until it met the sea:
    It was glorious glad marching,
    A marching glad and free.

    Kilpatrick's snare of riders
    In zigzags mazed the land,
    Perplexed the pale Southsiders
    With feints on every hand;
    Vague menace awed the hiders
    In forts beyond command.
    To Sherman's shifting problem
    No foeman knew the key;
    But onward went the marching
    Unpausing to the sea:
    It was glorious glad marching,
    The swinging step was free.

    The flankers ranged like pigeons
    In clouds through field or wood;
    The flocks of all those regions,
    The herds and horses good,

    Poured in and swelled the legions,
    For they caught the marching mood.
    A volley ahead! They hear it;
    And they hear the repartee:
    Fighting was but frolic
    In that marching to the sea:
    It was glorious glad marching,
    A marching bold and free.

    All nature felt their coming,
    The birds like couriers flew,
    And the banners brightly blooming
    The slaves by thousands drew,
    And they marched beside the drumming,
    And they joined the armies blue.
    The cocks crowed from the cannon
    (Pets named from Grant and Lee),
    Plumed fighters and campaigners
    In the marching to the sea:
    It was glorious glad marching,
    For every man was free.

    The foragers through calm lands
    Swept in tempest gay,
    And they breathed the air of balm-lands
    Where rolled savannas lay,
    And they helped themselves from farm-lands--
    As who should say them nay?
    The regiments uproarious
    Laughed in Plenty's glee;
    And they marched till their broad laughter
    Met the laughter of the sea:
    It was glorious glad marching,
    That marching to the sea.

    The grain of endless acres
    Was threshed (as in the East)
    By the trampling of the Takers,
    Strong march of man and beast;
    The flails of those earth-shakers
    Left a famine where they ceased.
    The arsenals were yielded;
    The sword (that was to be),
    Arrested in the forging,
    Rued
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