The Men Who Man Our Batteries

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The men who man our batteries,
  The men who serve our guns,
They need not honeyed flatteries,
  For they are Britain's sons!
They go, when Duty speeds them,
  Wherever bullets fly;
Wherever England needs them,
  When Duty bids, they die.

The men who man our strongholds,
  Or march to yonder field
Where Valour against Wrong holds
  A realm that scorns to yield,
From Chiltern Hills or Grampians
  May pour their living tide,
But all are England's champions
  And all are England's pride.

And, lo! how the abhorrence
  Of sceptred crime can join
The Thames and the St. Lawrence,
  The Liffey and the Boyne.
For England need but ask aid
  Where'er her branches grow,
And like a leaping cascade
  It thunders on the foe.


Our cheery sailors, lapt in
  The maiden sea's light sleep,
From commodore and captain
  To all who man the deep,
They hear around their bed nought
  But echoes of their fame,
And well they man the Dreadnought
  Who dread not aught but shame.


And whether calmly harboured,
  Or when the rocking State
Lurches to port and starboard,
  They sail the seas of Fate;
With everlasting laughter
  They luff to wind and rain,
Aforetime and hereafter
  The men who man the main.


The men who man Great Britain,
  And fight for royal George,
On battle's anvil smitten
  Leap mightier from the forge:
Like oaks in Orkney's rough spring
  They flourish torn and blown,
For all are Honour's offspring
  And all are England's own.

The men who man this nation,
  And sow her fame abroad,
They ask not acclamation,
  They need not England's laud;
And when too late it finds them,
  And falls on lifeless ears,
Where yon red tempest blinds them
  They need but England's tears.


Yet, while the storm grows vaster
  Around them and above,
In triumph or disaster
  They shall not lack our love --
They who to Glory's fanning
  This streamer have unfurled,
The men whose joy is manning,
  The men who man the world!

© William Watson