The Carillon

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  Alone
  I sit in the dusk and see
  Surely the living faces, dear to me,
  Of comrades who have thrown
  All that they had, the fruit of all desire,
  Upon an altar fire.

  They heard,
  Above all clamour of the crowd,
  The music of their own hearts throbbing loud
  Until the air was stirred
  Into a summoning harmony; and so
  We saw them rise, and go.

  The sound,
  That love set ringing in those years
  Of agony, exultation, voiceless fears,
  And hopes now underground,
  Shall not be silenced; it is thrilling yet,
  And we shall not forget.

  But clear
  The mellow tone of mingled notes,
  Triumph and sorrow made one spirit, floats
  To my prophetic ear;
  That is their music echoing, echoing still
  From our remembering hill.

© John Le Gay Brereton