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nd then, the gloom. For our narrow line too wide On the narrow crest we stood, And in pride we named it _Home_, As we sign'd it with our blood. And we held-on all the morning, and the tide Of foes on that low dyke Surged up, and fear'd to strike, Or on the bayonet-spike Flung them, and died. It was no covert, that, 'Gainst the shrieking cannon-ball! But the stout hearts of our men Were the bastion and the wall:-- And their chiefs hardly needed give command; For they tore through copse and gray Mist that before them lay, And each man fought, that day, For his own hand! Yet should we not forget 'Gainst that dun sea of foes How Egerton bank'd his line, Till in front a cloud uprose From the level rifle-mouths; and they dived With bayonet-thrust beneath; Clench'd teeth and sharp-drawn breath, Plunging to certain death,-- And yet survived! Nor the gallant chief who led Those others, how he fell; When our men the captive guns Set free they loved so well, And embraced them as live things, by loss endear'd:-- Nor, when the crucial stroke On their last asylum broke, And e'en those hearts of oak Might well have fear'd,-- How Stanley to the fore The citadel rush'd to guard, With that old Albuera cry _Fifty-seventh_! _Die hard_! Yet saw not how his lads clear the crest, And, each one confronting five, The stubborn squadrons rive, And backward, downward, drive,-- --Death-call'd to rest! --O proud and sad for thee! And proud and sad for those Who on that stern foreign field Not seeking, found repose, As for England dear their life they gladly shed! Yet in death bethought them where, Not on these hillsides bare, But within sweet English air Their own home-dead In a green and sure repose Beside God's house are laid:-- Then faced the charging foes Unmoved, unhelp'd, unafraid:-- For they knew that God would rate each shatter'd limb Death-torn for England's sake, And in Christ's own mercy take On the day when souls shall wake, Their souls to Him! The battle of Inkermann was mainly fought on a ridge of rock which projects from the south-eastern angle of Sebastapol: the English centre of operations being the ill-fortified line named the 'Home Ridge.' The numbers engaged in field-operations, roughly speaking,
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