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Poem by William Makepeace Thackeray


* * *


Ah, gentle, tender lady mine!
The winter wind blows cold and shrill,
Come, fill me one more glass of wine,
And give the silly fools their will.

And what care we for war and wrack,
How kings and heroes rise and fall;
Look yonder,* in his coffin black,
There lies the greatest of them all!

To pluck him down, and keep him up,
Died many million human souls;
’Tis twelve o’clock, and time to sup,
Bid Mary heap the fire with coals.

He captured many thousand guns;
He wrote "The Great" before his name;
And dying, only left his sons
The recollection of his shame.

Though more than half the world was his,
He died without a rood his own;
And borrowed from his enemies
Six foot of ground to lie upon.

He fought a thousand glorious wars,
And more than half the world was his,
And somewhere now, in yonder stars,
Can tell, mayhap, what greatness is.

* This ballad was written at Paris 
at the time of the Second Funeral of Napoleon

1841

William Makepeace Thackeray


William Makepeace Thackeray's other poems:
  1. The King on the Tower
  2. My Nora
  3. Peg of Limavaddy
  4. The Almack’s Adieu
  5. The Last of May


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