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Margaret J. Preston

No biography available

Margaret J. Preston

Dirge For Ashby.

Heard ye that thrilling word -
Accent of dread -
Flash like a thunderbolt,
Bowing each head -
Crash through the battle dun,
Over the booming gun -
"Ashby, our bravest one, -
Ashby is dead!"

Saw ye the veterans -
Hearts that had known
Never a quail of fear,
Never a groan -
Sob 'mid the fight they win,
- Tears their stern eyes within, -
"Ashby, our Paladin,
Ashby is gone!"

Dash, - dash the tear away -
Crush down the pain!
"Dulce et decus," be
Fittest refrain!
Why should the dreary pall
Round him be flung at all?
Did not our hero fall
Gallantly slain?

Catch the last word of cheer
Dropt from his tongue;
Over the volley's din,
Lo...

Margaret J. Preston

Jackson. A Sonnet.

Thank God for such a Hero! - Fearless hold
His diamond character beneath the sun,
And brighter scintillations, one by one,
Come flashing from it. Never knight of old
Wore on serener brow, so calm, yet bold,
Diviner courage: never martyr knew
Trust more sublime, - nor patriot, zeal more true, -
Nor saint, self-abnegation of a mould
Touched with profounder beauty. All the rare,
Clear, starry points of light, that gave his soul
Such lambent lustre, owned but one sole aim, -
Not for himself, nor yet his country's fame,
These glories shone: he kept the clustered whole
A jewel for the crown that Christ shall wear!

Margaret J. Preston

Stonewall Jackson's Grave.[A]

A simple, sodded mound of earth,
Without a line above it;
With only daily votive flowers
To prove that any love it:
The token flag that silently
Each breeze's visit numbers,
Alone keeps martial ward above
The hero's dreamless slumbers.

No name? - no record? Ask the world;
The world has read his story -
If all its annals can unfold
A prouder tale of glory: -
If ever merely human life
Hath taught diviner moral, -
If ever round a worthier brow
Was twined a purer laurel!

A twelvemonth only, since his sword
Went flashing through the battle -
A twelvemonth only, since his ear
Heard war's last deadly rattle -
And yet, have countless pilgrim-feet
The pilgrim's guerdon paid him,
And w...

Margaret J. Preston

Virginia Capta.

APRIL 9TH, 1865.


I.

Unconquered captive! - close thine eye,
And draw the ashen sackcloth o'er,
And in thy speechless woe deplore
The fate that would not let thee die!


II.

The arm that wore the shield, strip bare;
The hand that held the martial rein,
And hurled the spear on many a plain -
Stretch - till they clasp the shackles there!


III.

The foot that once could crush the crown,
Must drag the fetters, till it bleed
Beneath their weight: - thou dost not need
It now, to tread the tyrant down.


IV.

Thou thought'st him vanquish'd - boastful trust!
- His lance, in twain - his sword, a wreck -
But with his heel upon thy neck,
He holds thee

Margaret J. Preston

Virginia. A Sonnet.

Grandly thou fillest the world's eye to-day,
My proud Virginia! When the gage was thrown -
The deadly gage of battle - thou, alone,
Strong in thy self-control, didst stoop to lay
The olive-branch thereon, and calmly pray
We might have peace, the rather. When the foe
Turned scornfully upon thee, - bade thee go,
And whistled up his war-hounds, then - the way
Of duty full before thee, - thou didst spring
Into the centre of the martial ring -
Thy brave blood boiling, and thy glorious eye,
Shot with heroic fire, and swear to claim
Sublimest victory in God's own name, -
Or, wrapped in robes of martyrdom, - to die!

Margaret J. Preston

When The War Is Over. A Christmas Lay.

I.

Ah! the happy Christmas times!
Times we all remember; -
Times that flung a ruddy glow
O'er the gray December; -
Will they never come again,
With their song and story?
Never wear a remnant more
Of their olden glory?
Must the little children miss
Still the festal token?
Must their realm of young romance
All be marred and broken?
Must the mother promise on,
While her smiles dissemble,
And she speaks right quietly,
Lest her voice should tremble: -

"Darlings! wait till father comes -
Wait - and we'll discover
Never were such Christmas times,
When the war is over!"


II.

Underneath the midnight sky,
Bright with starry beauty,
Sad, the shivering sentinel...

Margaret J. Preston