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The Two-Space War by Dave Grossman and Leo Frankowski

And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.

Poetry References

Chapter 1:

An orphan’s curse would drag to hell . . .

“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Chapter 2:

The fighting man shall take from the sun . . .

(and following stanzas)

“Into Battle,” Julian Grenfell

I never shall forget the way . . .

“The Modern Traveler,” Hilaire Belloc

Chapter 3:

. . . The burning sun no more shall heat . . .

“As Weary Pilgrim,” Anne Bradstreet

Chapter 4:

Here dead lie we because we did not chose . . .

“Here Dead Lie We,” A.E. Housman

There’s a land that is fairer than day . . .

“Sweet By and By,” S.F. Bennett and J.P. Webster

High in the wreck I held the cup . . .

“The Deluge,” G.K. Chesterton

. . . Kilmeny had been where the cock never crew . . .

“Kilmeny,” James Hogg

Read here the moral roundly writ . . .

“Boxing,” from “Verses on Games,” Rudyard Kipling

We are the Dead. Short days ago . . .

“In Flanders Field,” John McCrae

I’ve lived a life of sturt and strife . . .

“MacPherson’s Farewell,” Robert Burns

Soft as the voice of an angel . . .

“Whispering Hope,” Septimus Winner

Oh yesterday our little troop was ridden through and through . . .

“To-morrow,” John Masefield

Chapter 5:

Biding God’s pleasure and their chief’s command . . .

“The Birkenhead,” Sir Henry Yule

But now ye wait at Hell-Mouth Gate and not in Berkely Square . . .

“Tomlinson,” Rudyard Kipling

Chapter 6:

Quoth he, “The she-wolf’s litter . . .”

“Horatius,” Lord Macaulay

And out the red blood spouted . . .

“The Battle of Lake Regillus,” Lord Macaulay

I shall not die alone, alone, but kin to all the powers . . .

(and following couplets)

“The Last Hero,” G.K. Chesterton

Through teeth, and skull, and helmet . . .

“Horatius,” Lord Macaulay

Chapter 7:

A child said What is the grass? . . .

“Song of Myself,” Walt Whitman

Too delicate is flesh to be . . .

“The Debt,” E.V. Lucas

Was there love once? I have forgotten her . . .

(and following four stanzas)

“Fulfillment,” Robert Nichols

For, alas, alas, with me . . .

“To One in Paradise,” E.A. Poe

Chapter 8:

Around no fire the soldiers sleep to-night . . .

(and following stanza)

“The Battlefield,” Sydney Oswald

When first I saw you in the curious street . . .

“German Prisoners,” Joseph Lee

The recipe for “Thrice Cooked Javalina Brains,” and the story about “Major” are from the wonderful (and highly recommended) book, The Contented Poacher’s Epicurean Odyssey, by Elantu Viovodi, with the author’s gracious permission.

Bind her, grind her, burn her with fire . . .

“A Chant of Love for England,” Helen Gray Cone

Chapter 9:

Big bugs have little bugs . . .

Originally by Jonathan Swift,

then modified by Ogden Nash and anon.

Burned from the ore’s rejected dross . . .

“The Anvil,” Laurence Binyon

All that is gold does not glitter . . .

From The Fellowship of the Ring, J.R.R. Tolkien,

The fewer men, the greater share of honour . . .

From Henry V, Shakespeare

A thousand shapes of death surround us . . .

The Iliad, Book 12, Homer

Chapter 10:

Shall I retreat from him, from clash of combat . . .

The Iliad, Book 18, Homer

She reached our range. Our broadside rang . . .

(and following stanzas)

“On Board the Cumberland” George H. Boker

Then the dead men fouled the scuppers and the wounded filled the chains . . .

“The Ballad of John Silver,” John Masefield

No heed he gave to the flying ball . . .

“The Sword-Bearer,” George H. Boker

Victory! Victory! . . .

“Boy Brittan,” Forceythe Willson

Chapter 11:

He said: “Thou petty people, let me pass . . .

“The Kaiser and Belgium,” Stephen Phillips

Efficient, thorough, strong, and brave—his vision is to kill . . .

“The Superman,” Robert Grant

Hark, hark, the dogs do bark . . .

“Mother Goose”, anon.

All other stanzas are from Service’s “The Call”

Chapter 12:

A hundred thousand fighting men . . .

(and following stanzas)

“The Battle of Liège,” Dana Burnet

Three hundred thousand men, but not enough . . .

(and following stanza)

“Verdun,” Eden Phillpotts

Chapter 13:

All drawn from “A Consecration,” John Masefield

Chapter 14:

All drawn from “Once to Every Man and Nation,” James Russell Lowell

Chapter 16:

Was a lady such a lady, cheeks so round and lips so red . . .

“A Toccatta of Galuppi’s,” Robert Browning

You meaner beauties of the night . . .

“Elizabeth of Bohemia,” Sir Henry Wotton

Chapter 17:

True Thomas lay on Huntlie bank . . .

(and following stanzas)

“True Thomas,” anon.

Some text has been derived from a poem entitled, “The Warrior and the Lady,” by Billy Martin, with the author’s gracious permission.

Chapter 18:

My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun . . .

“Sonnet CXXX,” Shakespeare

I have been given my charge to keep . . .

“The Fairies’ Siege,” Rudyard Kipling

I must down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky . . .

“Sea Fever,” John Masefield

THE END

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Categories: Leo Frankowski
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