The General Elliott

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  He fell in victory's fierce pursuit,
  Holed through and through with shot,
  A sabre sweep had hacked him deep
  Twixt neck and shoulderknot....

  The potman cannot well recall,
  The ostler never knew,
  Whether his day was Malplaquet,
  The Boyne or Waterloo.

  But there he hangs for tavern sign,
  With foolish bold regard
  For cock and hen and loitering men
  And wagons down the yard.

  Raised high above the hayseed world
  He smokes his painted pipe,
  And now surveys the orchard ways,
  The damsons clustering ripe.

  He sees the churchyard slabs beyond,
  Where country neighbours lie,
  Their brief renown set lowly down;
  His name assaults the sky.

  He grips the tankard of brown ale
  That spills a generous foam:
  Oft-times he drinks, they say, and winks
  At drunk men lurching home.

  No upstart hero may usurp
  That honoured swinging seat;
  His seasons pass with pipe and glass
  Until the tale's complete.

  And paint shall keep his buttons bright
  Though all the world's forgot
  Whether he died for England's pride
  By battle, or by pot.

© Robert Graves