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Stories and ballads for young folks cover

Stories and ballads for young folks

Chapter 41: THE CHILD ON THE BATTLE-FIELD.
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About This Book

A mixed collection of short narratives and lyrical pieces aimed at young readers, blending domestic vignettes, playful adventures, and brief moral sketches. Many items focus on childhood scenes—games, family interactions, small acts of kindness and perseverance—while others drift into fairy-tale or fanciful territory with giants, princesses, and imaginative escapades. Interspersed ballads and poems celebrate nature, simple joys, and consolation, shifting tone between humor, tenderness, and gentle instruction. The pieces are concise and varied, alternating story and verse to amuse, soothe, and offer mild ethical reflections appropriate for a youthful audience.

THE CHILD ON THE BATTLE-FIELD.

Over the flowery meadow
She wanders with careless feet,
Chasing butterflies golden,
Gathering blossoms sweet.
She talks a-while to the roses,
She grasps at the sunbeams bright;
To pieces she plucks the daisies,
And scatters their rays of white.
“Tra, la, la, la, la, la, la!”
She carols so sweet and clear,
Unheeding the two great armies,
Gathered in silence near—
The two great hostile armies
Gathered in battle array,
Watching the tiny creature
Among the blossoms at play.
And never a sword is lifted,
And never an order heard,
As they list to the silvery accents,
Like the trill of a blithesome bird.
They listen, the grim old warriors,
To the voice so full of glee,
Singing, “Tra, la, la, la, la,
Tra, la, la, la, la, lee!”
And over the rippling tresses
Do they watch the sunbeams glide,
Till many a lip that quivers,
The gray mustaches hide.
And many a heart beats faster,
As the thoughts of those thousands stray
To the little ones singing, playing,
In the homes so far away;
Little ones singing, playing,
Happy and gay and free,
Sunny-haired little children
They never again may see.
Thus do they wait in silence,
Till the child to her cottage-door
Creeps—as the sunshine, often,
From skies that are clouded o’er.
Then—as those clouds in anger
Meet with deafening din,
So the two hostile armies
The battle straightway begin.
That was hundreds of years since;
Scarcely the records tell
To which of those hostile armies
The glory of winning fell.
But though ’twas hundreds of years since.
There you may read, this day,
How a little child, unwitting,
Held them an hour at bay.