The Mothers of the West

BY WILLIAM D. GALLACHER

The Mothers of our Forest-Land!
 Stout-hearted dames were they;
With nerve to wield the battle-brand,
 And join the border-fray.
Our rough land had no braver,
 In its days of blood and strife—
Aye ready for severest toil,
 Aye free to peril life.

The Mothers of our Forest-Land!
 On old Kan-tuc-kee's soil,
How shared they, with each dauntless band,
 War's tempest and Life's toil!
They shrank not from the foeman—
 They quailed not in the fight—
But cheer'd their husbands through the day,
 And soothed them through the night.

The Mothers of our Forest-Land!
 Their bosoms pillowed men!
And proud were they by such to stand,
 In hammock, fort, or glen.
To load the sure old rifle—
 To run the leaden ball—
To watch a battling husband's place,
 And fill it should he fall:

The Mothers of our Forest-Land!
  Such were their daily deeds.
Their monument!—where does it stand?
 Their epitaph!—who reads?
No braver dames had Sparta,
 No nobler matrons Rome—
Yet who or lauds or honors them,
 Ev'n in their own green home!

The Mothers of our Forest-Land!
 They sleep in unknown graves:
And had they borne and nursed a band
 Of ingrates, or of slaves,
They had not been more neglected!
 But their graves shall yet be found,
And their monuments dot here and there
 “The Dark and Bloody Ground.”
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