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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 65. ...how our noble Willie fell...
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The Vacant Chair
On this Memorial Day, let us remember Henry Stevenson Washburn. He was forty-eight years old when he met and watched an eighteen-year-old John William Grout lead a charge and die in the Battle of Ball’s Bluff. The young lieutenant must have meant a great deal to the poet, and since the death occurred near the time of Thanksgiving, he imagined himself as a loved one gathered around the table with the rest of the dead boy’s family.
We shall meet but we shall miss him.
There will be one vacant chair.
We shall linger to caress him,
While we breathe our ev’ning prayer.
When a year ago we gathered,
Joy was in his mild blue eye.
But a golden cord is severed.
And our hopes in ruin lie.
We shall meet, but we shall miss him.
There will be one vacant chair.
We will linger to caress him,
When we breathe our ev’ning prayer.
At our fireside, sad and lonely,
Often will the bosom swell,
At remembrance of the story –
How our noble Willie fell;
How he strove to bear our banner,
Thro’ the thickest of the fight,
And uphold our country’s honor
In the strength of manhood’s might.
We shall meet, but we shall miss him.
There will be one vacant chair.
We will linger to caress him,
When we breathe our ev’ning prayer.
True, they tell us, wreaths of glory
Evermore will deck his brow;
But this soothes the anguish only,
Sweeping o’er our heart-strings now.
Sleep to-day, O early fallen!
In thy green and narrow bed:
Dirges from the pine and cypress
Mingle with the tears we shed.
We shall meet, but we shall miss him.
There will be one vacant chair.
We will linger to caress him,
When we breathe our ev’ning prayer.
—Henry Stevenson Washburn,[i]
November 16th, 1861
[i] “The Vacant Chair” Henry Stevenson Washburn, reprinted in The Vacant Chair and Other Poems (New York 1895), ps. 13-18
https://archive.org/details/vacantchairando00washgoog/page/n18/mode/2up
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