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John Marr and Other Poems

Chapter 62: THE RELEASED REBEL PRISONER
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About This Book

The collection presents a range of lyric poems and longer pieces that move between maritime imagery, elegiac reflection, and stark battle verse. Many poems evoke oceanic scenes and shipboard fellowship while others confront the violence, aftermath, and moral uncertainty of armed conflict. Interwoven are philosophical meditations and classical or literary allusions that shift tone from colloquial anecdote to austere contemplation. Selections include short lyrics, narrative fragments, extracts from larger verse cycles, and a prose supplement that clarifies the war material. A persistent, individual voice binds the pieces, balancing rough seafaring idiom with earnest poetic inquiry.

THE RELEASED REBEL PRISONER

June, 1865

Armies he’s seen—the herds of war,
    But never such swarms of men
As now in the Nineveh of the North—
    How mad the Rebellion then!

And yet but dimly he divines
    The depth of that deceit,
And superstitution of vast pride
    Humbled to such defeat.

Seductive shone the Chiefs in arms—
    His steel the nearest magnet drew;
Wreathed with its kind, the Gulf-weed drives—
    ’Tis Nature’s wrong they rue.

His face is hidden in his beard,
    But his heart peers out at eye—
And such a heart! like a mountain-pool
    Where no man passes by.

He thinks of Hill—a brave soul gone;
    And Ashby dead in pale disdain;
And Stuart with the Rupert-plume,
    Whose blue eye never shall laugh again.

He hears the drum; he sees our boys
From his wasted fields return;
Ladies feast them on strawberries,
    And even to kiss them yearn.

He marks them bronzed, in soldier-trim,
    The rifle proudly borne;
They bear it for an heirloom home,
    And he—disarmed—jail-worn.

Home, home—his heart is full of it;
    But home he never shall see,
Even should he stand upon the spot:
    ’Tis gone!—where his brothers be.

The cypress-moss from tree to tree
    Hangs in his Southern land;
As weird, from thought to thought of his
    Run memories hand in hand.

And so he lingers—lingers on
    In the City of the Foe—
His cousins and his countrymen
    Who see him listless go.