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I went to see old Susan Gray, Whose soldier sons had marched away, And this is what she had to say:
"It isn't war I hate at all-- 'Tis likely men must fight-- But, oh, these flags and uniforms, It's them that isn't right!
If war must come, and come it does To take our boys from play, It isn't right to make it seem So beautiful and gay."
I left old Susan with a sigh; A famous band was marching by To make men glad they had to die.
Dependence
(An Englishwoman whose income has stopped owing to her two sons having joined the English army, was taken care of last night at the Florence Crittenden Mission.--_Press Clipping_.)
The young men said to their mother, "Hear us, O dearest and best!
Time cannot cool or smother The love of you in our breast; Here is your place and no other-- Come home and rest."
And the mother's heart was grateful For the love of her cherished ones, And her labor, bitter and hateful, She left at the word of her sons, Till she heard far off the fateful Voices of guns.
Their love did more enslave her; They did not understand That none could guard or save her When war was on the land, But herself, and G.o.d, who gave her Heart and mind and hand.
Playthings
Last year the shops were crowded With soldier suits and guns-- The presents that at Christmas time We give our little sons; And many a glittering trumpet And many a sword and drum; But as they're made in Germany This year they will not come.
Perhaps another season We shall not give our boys Such very warlike playthings, Such military toys; Perhaps another season We shall not think it sweet To watch their game of soldier men, Who dream not of defeat.
Militants
Hippolta, Penthesilea, Maria Teresa and Joan, Agustina and Boadicea And some militant girls of our own-- It would take a brave man and a dull one To say to these ladies: "Of course We adore you while meek, Timid, clinging and weak, But a woman can never use force."
A Lady's Choice
Her old love in tears and silence had been building her a palace Ringed by moats and flanked with towers, he had set it on a hill "Here," he said, "will come no whisper of the world's alarms and malice, In these granite walls imprisoned, I will keep you safe from ill."
As he spoke along the highway there came riding by a stranger, For an instant on her features, he a fleeting glance bestowed, Then he said: "My heart is fickle and the world is full of danger,"
And he offered her his stirrup and he pointed down the road.
The Ballad of Lost Causes
(_About 465 years after Villon_.)
Tell me in what spot remote Do the antis dwell to-day, Those who did not want to vote, Feared their s.e.x's prompt decay?
Where are those who used to say: "Home alone is woman's sphere; Only those should vote who slay"?
Where the snows of yester-year?
Where are those who used to quote Nietzsche's words in dread array?
Where the ancient crones who wrote: "Women rule through Beauty's sway"?
And those lovers, where are they, Who could hold no woman dear If she had the ballot? Nay!
Where the snows of yester-year?
Prince, inquire no more, I pray, Whither antis disappear.
Suffrage won; they melt away, Like the snows of yester-year.
Thoughts at an Anti Meeting
There are no homes in suffrage states, There are no children, glad and good, There, men no longer seek for mates, And women lose their womanhood.
This I believe without debate, And yet I ask--and ask in vain-- Why no one in a suffrage state Has moved to change things back again?
A MASQUE OF TEACHERS
AND
THE UNCONSCIOUS SUFFRAGISTS
The Ideal Candidates
(A by-law of the New York Board of Education says: "No married woman shall be appointed to any teaching or supervising position in the New York public schools unless her husband is mentally or physically incapacitated to earn a living or has deserted her for a period of not less than one year.")