Maktoob

Alan Seeger

1888 to 1916

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

A shell surprised our post one day
 And a comrade at my side.
My heart was sick see the way
   He suffered as he died.

dug about the place he fell,
 And found, bigger than my thumb,
A fragment of the splintered
   In warm aluminum.

I melted it, and made mould,
 And poured it in the opening,
And it, when the cast was cold,
   Into a ring.

And when my ring was smooth and bright,
 Holding it on a rounded stick,
For seal, I a Turco write
   'Maktoob' in Arabic.

'Maktoob!' "'Tis written!" . . . So they think,
  children of the desert, who
From its immense expanses
   Some of its grandeur too.

Within the book Destiny,
 Whose leaves are time, whose cover, space,
day when you shall cease to be,
   The hour, the mode, the place,

Are marked, they say; and shall not
 By taking thought or using wit
that certain fate one jot,
   Postpone or conjure it.

Learn to drive fear, then, from your heart.
  you must perish, know, O man,
'Tis an inevitable
   Of the predestined plan.

And, seeing that through ebon door
 Once only you may pass, and
Of those that have gone through before
   The mighty, the elite ——

Guard that not bowed nor blanched fear
 You enter, but serene, erect,
As you wish most to appear
   To those you most respect.

So die as though your funeral
 Ushered you the doors that led
Into a stately banquet hall
   Where heroes banqueted;

And it shall all depend therein
 Whether you come as slave or lord,
If they you as their kin
   Or spurn you from board.

So, when the order comes: "Attack!"
  the assaulting wave deploys,
And the heart trembles to back
   On life and all its joys;

Or a ditch that they seem near
 To find, round your shallow trough
Drop the big shells that can hear
   Coming a half mile off;

When, to hear, some try to talk,
 And some clean their guns, or sing,
And some dig deeper the chalk —
   I look upon my ring:

nerves relax that were most tense,
 And Death whistling down unheard,
As I consider all the sense
   Held in that mystic word.

And it brings, quieting balm
 My heart whose flutterings have ceased,
The and the calm
   And wisdom of the East.