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| I WENT upon a journey | |
| To countries far away, | |
| From province unto province | |
| To pass my holiday. | |
| |
| And when I came to Serbia, | 5 |
| In a quiet little town | |
| At an inn with a flower-filled garden | |
| With a soldier I sat down. | |
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| Now he lies dead at Belgrade. | |
| You heard the cannon roar! | 10 |
| It boomed from Rome to Stockholm, | |
| It pealed to the far west shore. | |
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| And when I came to Russia, | |
| A man with flowing hair | |
| Called me his friend and showed me | 15 |
| A flowing river there. | |
| |
| Now he lies dead at Lemberg, | |
| Beside another stream, | |
| In his dark eyes extinguished | |
| The friendship of his dream. | 20 |
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| And then I crossed two countries | |
| Whose names on my lips are sealed
| |
| Not yet had they flung their challenge | |
| Nor led upon the field | |
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| Sons who lie dead at Liège, | 25 |
| Dead by the Russian lance, | |
| Dead in southern mountains, | |
| Dead through the farms of France. | |
| |
| I stopped in the land of Louvain, | |
| So tranquil, happy, then. | 30 |
| I lived with a good old woman, | |
| With her sons and her grandchildren. | |
| |
| Now they lie dead at Louvain, | |
| Those simple kindly folk. | |
| Some heard, some fled. It must be | 35 |
| Some slept, for they never woke. | |
| |
| I came to France. I was thirsty. | |
| I sat me down to dine. | |
| The host and his young wife served me | |
| With bread and fruit and wine. | 40 |
| |
| Now he lies dead at Cambrai | |
| He was sent among the first. | |
| In dreams she sees him dying | |
| Of wounds, of heat, of thirst. | |
| |
| At last I passed to Dover | 45 |
| And saw upon the shore | |
| A tall young English captain | |
| And soldiers, many more. | |
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| Now they lie dead at Dixmude, | |
| The brave, the strong, the young! | 50 |
| I turn unto my homeland, | |
| All my journey sung! | |
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