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The Blue and The Gray
(Author Unknown)
"O mother! What do they mean by blue? And what do they mean by gray?" I heard from the lips of a little child As she bounded in from her play. The mother's eyes were filled with tears; She turned to her darling fair And smoothed away from the sunny brow The treasure of golden hair.
"Why, mother's eyes are blue, my sweet, And grandpa's hair is gray, And the love we bear our darling child Grows stronger every day." "For what do they mean?" maintained the child, "For I saw two cripples to-day, And one of them said he had 'fought for the blue,' The other had 'fought for the gray.'
"The one of the blue had lost a leg, And the other had but one arm, And both seemed worn and weary and sad, Yet their greeting was kind and warm, They told of the battles in days gone by Till it made my blood run chill, The leg was lost in the Wilderness fight And the arm on Malvern Hill.
"They sat on the stone by the farmyard gate And talked for an hour or more, Till their eyes grew bright and their hearts seemed warm With fighting their battles o'er; And parted at last with a friendly grasp, In a kindly, brotherly way, Each asking God to speed the time Uniting the blue and the gray."
Then the mother thought of other days, Two stalwart boys from her riven; How they'd knelt at her side, and, lisping, prayed: "Our Father, who art in heaven;" How one wore the gray and the other the blue, How they passed away from sight And had gone to the land where gray and blue Merge in tints of celestial light.
And she answered her darling with golden hair, While her heart was sorely wrung With thoughts awakened in that sad hour By her innocent, prattling tongue; "The blue and the gray are the colors of God; They are seen in the sky at even, And many a noble, gallant soul Has found them passports to heaven."
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