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						WAR POEMS In PRAISE Of HEROES 
						
						
						By	ALEXANDER KARANIKAS
  
						DEDICATED 
						To All Who Fought 
						That Our Nation 
						May Survive
  
						
						About the Author 
						
							Alexander Karanikas, a resident of Goffstown, New Hampshire, and
							an honor graduate of Harvard College, Class of 1939, was a Staff
							Sergeant in the Army Air Forces.  He was stationed for two years at
							Ladd Field, Alaska, the crossroads of Asia and America, where Soviet
							pilots took over Lend-Lease planes for the long flight through Siberia
							to the fighting fronts.
  
						
						
							Most of the poems in this volume have been printed in various military
							journals and have won high praise for the author from soldiers and
							civilians alike.  They represent the sensitive reaction of a keen mind
							and an understanding heart to the "soul turmoil" that is war - the
							hidden price our young men have paid in heart anguish and lost 
							dreams, all bound together and made meaningful by a strong faith
							that the sacrifice was not made in vain, that now a triumphant
							democracy will truly bring peace and happiness to all mankind.
  
						
							Sergeant Karanikas is well-known among progressive circles in
							America and is highly respected as a leader of the new generation.
							Much more will be heard from him in the coming years. Since our
							first meeting during his student days at Cambridge I have found
							him constantly and deeply motivated by a Christian love for his
							fellow man, a concern eloquently expressed in his poetry.
  
						
							IN PRAISE OF HEROES is a powerful and moving tribute to all
							who contributed, by blood and tears, work and hope, to the over-
							whelming victory of the United Nations.
  
						
												STEPHEN HOLE FRITCHMAN 
												Editor, The Christian Register
  
												
						SOLDIER'S RETURN
  
												
										When the last red tank has grumbled 
										Through the fortress of the foe 
										I shall return, my dear, 
										Full of the vast accumulated love 
										That from my silent longing 
										In the southern isles I gathered 
										As a future gift for you.
  
						
										What desolation passed before my eyes 
										I counted but a dream 
										That history in her fetid torment 
										Passes on to man; 
										I know that from my faith in you 
										New cities will be born 
										Where they dug graves for hostages.
  
						
										Though soil may bitter grow from all 
										That youthful flesh and blood, 
										I doubt not that our love 
										Shall bring a harvest to the world 
										That will efface the ruins of war, 
										With grain and joy in such abundance 
										That men shall once again be free.
  
						
										So wait, my dear, until my task 
										Is done, the last attack repulsed, 
										My bayonet in sheath; 
										Wait till the earth reconquered rise 
										To bring me on its shoulders 
										Back to you, while crowds in glee 
										Yell loud and wild in victory.
  
												
										America awaits you from your battle cry, 
										The streets and valleys that you love, the faces 
										That will look so good in Kansas and L.A. 
										America salutes you, not with martial bands, 
										But with the silent, grateful heart, 
										The gentle smile, the long prayer 
										Of giving thanks; for you shall be the heroes 
										Who lit candles in the frantic blackout 
										Of her vast, pulsating, democratic soul. 
										In this dim hour before the dawn America 
										Prays for you: Oh God, our cause is just, 
										Our honor firm, our conscience clear: 
										To us belongs the victory!
  
						
						TO THE GREEKS AT MT. OLYMPUS
  
						
										Again the transient tyrant clutches 
										At the jewel of the ages, Greece, 
										Fatherland of all republics and creator 
										Of the arts, island universe 
										Where liberty is nourished by the blood 
										Of fallen sons among the rocks and olives, 
										Nation where the spears of modern Persians 
										Shatter on the dreams, the thundering hearts, 
										Of Hellenes once again in arms.
  
						
										What evil conscience rides the world 
										That death should stalk the home of gods? 
										That planes like harpies fire the hills 
										And cannon break the mountain walls? 
										What savage passion risen in the night 
										Sends maidens screaming from the well 
										And brings a blackout over old Thermopylae? 
										Be once again the vanguard of mankind; 
										Let torches blaze from Olympus to herald 
										For all time the peace of brotherhood 
										To all the sad and bleeding world.
  
												
						SWASTIKA ON OLYMPUS
  
												
									Trees became serpents and brooklets blood 
									When the gods on Olympus were shot; 
									The devil rode high on a Panzer Division, 
									The angels in heaven were not. 
						
									Above the cannon, beneath the planes, 
									In the vast meridian of life, 
									The people of Greece again grew great 
									In the grandeur of noble strife.
  
						
									All through the world like a rising tide 
									Rose hope that athwart defeat 
									Would strike the thunder of freedom won, 
									"No more shall the truth retreat!"
  
						
									What breath could inspire and flesh conceive, 
									What passion and mind could dare, 
									The Greeks did double until their blood 
									Was one with the mountains there.
  
						
									Some day the serpents and blood will go, 
									The swastikas and bars 
									Will ride the wave of the peoples' wrath 
									Beyond and above the stars.
  
						
									And then will liberty come again 
									From Olympus to the sea, 
									And daughters and sons will love again 
									With the love of the brave and the free.
  
						
						MYTHOLOGY FOR A CONQUERED LAND
  
												
									Since greater dragons have declared a war 
									Tell Theseus that he spare the Minotaur, 
									Leave Ariadne to her pain and woe 
									For into Athens has arrived a foe 
									Demands a tribute to make Midas seem 
									A thirst for water in a dream; 
									Comes with tongue bleeding from the feast 
									Of tender nations in the East, 
									With bits of human flesh about his chin 
									To show the depths where fangs dug in; 
									With eyes that glare like lynx at bay 
									In fear of what his slaves might say. 
									Return, dear Theseus, that your giant fist 
									Might strike like thunder from the mist, 
									To save your sister's menaced home 
									From the flames that ruined Rome, 
									From the blow and rape of Hun; 
									Come, my lad, and make him run.
  
						
									O fool Odysseus, may your body rot 
									Where clever Circe has enswined your lot! 
									While clouds of grief besmirch your city 
									You wander hypnotized by woman's ditty, 
									Leave Penelope in moan and tears 
									To play with dreams for ten long years, 
									Gone to fight the myth of Troy 
									When you were still a robust boy; 
									Now that Nazis fester in our land 
									And we have need of your brave band, 
									You still chase wind and boodle, 
									Man without a soul and noodle, 
									Absent when your nation 
									Groans in blood and devastation. 
									Fool Odysseus, will you always be 
									Lost when your people struggle to be free?
  
						
									Good Hercules, fine classic Greek in truth, 
									Here lies another burden for your youth. 
									Let Atlas take his worldly load, 
									For while you walked the Carthage road 
									A tyranny vaster than we've ever seen 
									Has overwhelmed us in a Noah's flood of spleen; 
									Men weep at dawn, and under olive trees 
									Die from their sorrow on their knees. 
									Come, that you may really test the length 
									And breadth of all your strength, 
									Face with your usual derision 
									A German mechanized division, 
									Sweep out the Luftwaffe from the skies 
									As if it were a cobweb on your eyes; 
									Stand upon Acropolis and roar 
									Defiance toward the North, and more, 
									Stay from your travels that fair Greece 
									May from this day remain at peace.
  
												
						THE HERITAGE OF ATHENS
  
												
									Ages have come and gone since Athens reared her sons 
									Beneath the gaze of Pericles; the years 
									Of bitter wind and ice have battered down 
									The timberlines; the tiny stream 
									Has nestled deeper in the rock; the forest soil 
									Has buried countless generations of the oak and pine. 
									Yet every year has cut in deeper vein 
									Your memory upon the heart of man.
  
						
									Egypt has come and gone, and Babylon, 
									And where the song of Homer filled the Aegean winds 
									Great cities like great roses once were new, 
									Saw springtime, and have since left nothing 
									But their thorns. Rome fell the friendless 
									Lion in the night; and Charlemagne; and Cromwell, 
									Napoleon, Kaiser Wilhelm, all 
									Empire-builders came to leave a wealth of pain 
									In human hearts.  Yet every year your glory rises, 
									Makes men dream, "If ancient Greece could be so great, 
									Then surely we shall learn to build Olympia again."
  
						
									Another age has come. 
									New Caesars flash their sabers in the face of time. 
									New bloodshed crusts the soil, new tempests 
									Thunder through the world.  Yet there will come 
									The day, when man will shake the dust that clouds 
									Him, grasp again the torch of liberty, 
									And make the world a mighty Athens for all time! 
						
						SONG OF THE NEW YEAR
  
												
									Sing of the anguish that has passed like fire 
										to scorch the pastures of our brain, and leave 
										our lives like blackened stumps; of young 
										desire that grew as fragile ferns to curl 
										before the flame and die; of tears upon 
										the broken branches of our dreams.
  
						
									Sing of our vengeance that destroyed the foe with 
										phantoms in the sea; with mighty carriers that 
										stung him like a hive of bees; with bombers 
										blazing like electric storms and fighters 
										spitting adder tongues; with red-eyed tanks 
										and guns and knives that came upon him as he 
										feasted on his love, to save her from 
										the thrust and venom of his greed.
  
						
									Sing of our men who dropped to earth with death 
										a busy burden in their blood; who caught 
										the lightning in their teeth at sad Bataan; 
										who drained like lemon juice the poison 
										from Pacific isles; and through the 
										long-toothed shores of Europe plunged 
										a naked hand to grip the monster by the throat.
  
						
									Sing of the coming home, the year's enormous hope, 
										when famished lips will kiss our famished 
										lips; when aching hands will meet and join 
										with aching hands; when eyes shall mate 
										with eyes, and breast with breast, to start 
										a new world growing in the womb of time.
  
						
						THE CROWDS OF FRANCE
  
												
									They called me hero, but my hearts was dead, 
									Until the crowds of France uplifted me: 
										So like a bold and eager girl 
									That unashamed of open lips and eyes 
									Will love you anywhere at anytime, 
										France hugged my head 
										And licked my face; 
										She did the rhumba, 
										Undid clothes, 
									The filthy garments of the Nazi occupation, 
									To bare her famous figure, 
									The sweetheart of the world!
  
						
									Not passion-wise alone that Dame LeFarge, 
									With new perfume in hair but bomb in hand 
									To blast a path beyond the barricades. 
										She might have terrified 
										The weak, the lame, 
									For what in anger can surpass a tigress 
									Caught, enraged, then free to rend 
										The captor's heart? 
									The blood that Danton let is flowing still 
									Across the fields of Normandy, 
										The poppies crushed and ruined 
									As the heavy-bodied men cast fleeting shadows 
									On the stump and rubble of the land.
  
						
						THOUGHTS BEFORE BATTLE
  
												
									While I lie darkly in the pit of night 
										Alert for what grim fate might be in store, 
									I seem to hear an avalanche of sound 
										And then, I hear no more; 
									Till softly, like a vast advancing host 
										To find me in the darkness where I lie, 
									A million peepers as in boyhood days 
										Arrive to sing their old sweet lullaby.
  
						
									Upon my shoulders where the straps cut deep 
										To etch their patterns of dull pain, 
									I feel the gentle touch of something warm, 
										And very kind, like rain; 
									Then joyfully she laughs with lips of rose 
										To kiss my wild and unbelieving eyes, 
									To whisper life and home and kids 
										And fill with song the menaced skies.
  
						
									One hour to go before the great barrage 
										Will cut the heavens with a sword of flame, 
									Yet strange that I should dream askance 
										Of nothing but my own forgotten name, 
									To see it as I carved it long ago 
										On that great oak upon the hill, 
									And feel the bark's strong fingers hold me, 
										Hug me, want me, love me still!
  
						
						LIFE SONG
  
												
									Speak no more of solitary leaves, 
									No more of buds like arrowheads on twigs; 
									No more of tiny wisps of fog, no more 
									Of dew upon a petal's face; 
									Tell us no more of single vine-prop in a single 
									Tentacle's embrace. 
										For these are the blizzard days 
										When bombers sprinkle death-flakes 
										Over land and sea; 
										These are the pain-cleft, birth-pang days 
										When the body of society aches 
										With kicking baby curled 
										Like sickle in her womb; 
										When fire in geyser volume gushes 
										Through her bowels her scream is 
										The united eloquence of flesh and bone, 
									Think not of song as sparrow's solo, crow's 
									Lament, as yours to squander like a grunt; 
									But think of mighty choruses, united. 
									All birds, all winds, all storms, all trees 
									Before the wind; all man, and all the powers 
									Of wood and steel that man makes move; 
									All night, all stars, all soft-veiled echoes 
									From the roar of space…and you will hear, 
										And love, and claim your own 
										The life song that was once a groan. 
						
						END OF MY LIFE
  
												
									This is the end.  In this immense calm 
									I enter my private oblivion, a window closed 
									On that enormous house, my life. 
									Here the river dries, dust's flower blooms 
									In the broad stillness of my mind; 
									Like an exile lost in sand my throat burns 
									With the thirst for one wet stone.
  
						
									Yet I die not like a battleship that sinks 
									To be another shadow on the sea's floor, 
									Nor as an oak that falls to let 
									The coming seasons cover it with soil: 
									Nor yet like a bear that fiercely tears 
									His talons toward the wounded heart. 
									I die young.  I am not really dead.
  
						
									I lie richly like a field with stalks 
									Of corn.  Tomorrow rain shall fall to burst 
									The soggy, seeded brain; 	
									My life is ruined like Amsterdam, 
									But it shall rise again in spring 
									When love shall break my bonds 
									To give me freedom and a song.
  
						
									Be still awhile, for human flesh revolts 
									Against the obstinate desire, the lust 
									Of power for rule of Fate; 
									Tomorrow we shall walk in sun across 
									Earth's lawn, where grasses will not tell 
									Of battlefields, and winds 
									Dare never whisper of the dead.
						 
						
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