________________________________________________
			     
				Title:     Ballad Of French Rivers 
			    
Author: Christopher Morley [
More Titles by Morley]		                
			    
Of streams that men take honour in
      The Frenchman looks to three,
    And each one has for origin
      The hills of Burgundy;
    And each has known the quivers
      Of blood and tears and pain--
    O gallant bleeding rivers,
      The Marne, the Meuse, the Aisne.
    Says Marne: "My poplar fringes
      Have felt the Prussian tread,
    The blood of brave men tinges
      My banks with lasting red;
    Let others ask due credit,
      But France has me to thank;
    Von Kluck himself has said it:--
      I turned the Boche's flank!"
    Says Meuse: "I claim no winning,
      No glory on the stage,
    Save that, in the beginning
      I strove to save Liege.
    Alas that Frankish rivers
      Should share such shame as mine--
    In spite of all endeavours
      I flow to join the Rhine!"
    Says Aisne: "My silver shallows
      Are salter than the sea,
    The woe of Rheims still hallows
      My endless tragedy.
    Of rivers rich in story
      That run through green Champagne,
    In agony and glory
      The chief am I, the Aisne!"
    Now there are greater waters
      That Frenchmen all hold dear--
    The Rhone, with many daughters,
      That runs so icy clear;
    There's Moselle, deep and winy,
      There's Loire, Garonne and Seine,
    But O the valiant tiny--
      The Marne, the Meuse, the Aisne!
[The end]
Christopher Morley's poem: Ballad Of French Rivers
			  	________________________________________________
				
                 
		 
                
                GO TO TOP OF SCREEN