CONTENTS

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"For All We Have and Are"
Kipling, Rudyard
1
Instructions to the British Soldier
Kitchener, Lord
3
Pro Patria
Seaman, Sir Owen
4
Statement in House of Lords
Kitchener, Lord
5
Between Midnight and Morning
Seaman, Sir Owen
7
Vigil, The
Newbolt, Sir Henry
7
Hour, The
Fagan, James Bernard
9
Off Heligoland
Middleton, J. E.
10
Call to Arms, A
Asquith, Rt. Hon. H. H.
11
Australia to England
Strong, Archibald
15
Extract from Speech
Churchill, Rt. Hon. Winston
16
What of the Fight?
Burton, Claude E. C. H.
17
Man of the Marne, The
Carman, Bliss
18
Telegram from King Albert to King George
20
India to England
Nizamat Jung
21
"A Scrap of Paper"
Lloyd George, Rt. Hon. David
22
Tribute, The
Begbie, Harold
27
From Speech at the Guildhall
Kitchener, Lord
28
Kaiser, The
Holland, Norah
30
From Debate on the Address
Asquith, Rt. Hon. H. H.
31
Canadian, The
Middleton, J. E.
31
To Belgium in Exile
Seaman, Sir Owen
33
Chant of Love for England, A
Cone, Helen Gray
34
"Canadians—Canadians—That's All!"
Peat, Private Harold R.
35
From "A Canadian Twilight"
Trotter, Bernard Freeman
39
We Were Men of the Furrow
Stead, Robert J. C.
39
Devon Men
Haselden, Percy
147
Britain's Day
Pershing, General J. J.
149
Gifts From the Dead
Lulham, P. Habberton
150
Woman's Toll, The
Duffin, Ruth
151
Pilgrims
Service, Robert W.
152
Epitaphs for the Slain
Edmonds, J. M.
153
Extract from Official Report
Haig, Field-Marshal Sir Douglas
154
Speech at Opening of Paris Conference
PoincarÉ, Raymond
155
National Anthem
160

The selections contained in this book make up a sequence which records the history of the Great War from the stirring days of August, 1914, to the opening of the Peace Conference in January, 1919. These selections of verse and prose are arranged, not necessarily in chronological order, but still with a view to indicate approximately the historic succession of great events and the varying moods of those authors and speakers who have been the voices of the allied nations during the fifty-two months of warfare.

Although this anthology has been prepared for the use of schools, the plan of selection and arrangement has made it impracticable to grade the poems and extracts to suit the capacities of pupils of different ages. The judgment of the teacher must determine what is suitable for one grade and what for another. Many of the poems and some of the prose extracts will be found too difficult for young pupils.

Due acknowledgments have been made throughout the book to the authors and publishers who have generously made it possible to bring together so valuable a collection of the literature of the War. The meed of gratitude due to all the writers represented here can never be adequately paid. Special mention is made of Nizamat Jung, Native Judge of the High Court of Hyderabad, who has given expression to the wonderful loyalty of the races of teeming India, which have poured out treasure and blood without stint in defence of their Emperor-King.

A sufficient number of copies of this book should be kept in all school libraries; and it is suggested that the poems and prose extracts should be used in the reading classes, as often as is expedient, instead of the authorized Readers.


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