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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Baker Brownell

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

Freebourne’s Rifle

Baker Brownell

From “In Barracks”

“IT’S an old gun,” the major said,

“But clean—give him excellent;”

And pushed the oil-scrubbed gun

Back on private Freebourne’s chest.

“An old gun! Hell, yes!” said Freebourne,

When he tried to turn it in

To the Q. M. for a new one;

“I put two hours a day on it.”

But Freebourne loved its steel;

He never took the other.

Two hours on steel, man’s metal,

Till the inner twirl of bore

Carried the light in gleaming gutters

Round, coiled round on itself,

To lurch pointed bullets true

A thousand yards. Two hours

Testing the severe materiality of steel:

Steel thought, steel calculation,

Severe, absolute in hardness,

Loyal to existence—

It could transcend sense sogginess and flesh.

Two hours the soldier loved his steel,

Its truth, its edge,

Its fearlessness of fact, its bitterness of line,

Its certainty and decision.