William Arthur Dunkerley

William Arthur Dunkerley Poems

As sure as God's in His Heaven,
As sure as He stands for Right,
As sure as the hun this wrong hath done,
...

We thank Thee, Lord,
For mercies manifold in these dark days;-
For Heart of Grace that would not suffer wrong;
For all the stirrings in the dead dry bones;
...

We thank Thee, Lord,
For all Thy Golden Silences,-
For every Sabbath from the world's turmoil;
For every respite from the stress of life;-
...

(TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN)

Hello! Hello!
Are you there? Are you there?
Ah! That you? Well,-
...

Britain! Our Britain! uprisen in the splendour
Of your white wrath at treacheries so vile;
Roused from your sleep, become once more defender
Of those high things which make life worth life's while!
...

Lord, when Thou seest that my work is done,
Let me not linger on,
With failing powers,
...

Is the pathway dark and dreary?
God's in His heaven!
Are you broken, heart-sick, weary?
God's in His heaven!
...

Curly head, and laughing eyes,-
Mischief that all blame defies.

Cricket,- footer,- Eton-jacket,-
Everlasting din and racket.
...

Soul, dost thou fear
For to-day or to-morrow?
'Tis the part of a fool
To go seeking sorrow.
...

I have been tried,
Tried in the fire,
And I say this,
As the result of dire distress,
...

Better in bitterest agony to lie,
Before Thy throne,
Than through much increase to be lifted up on high,
And stand alone.
...

Though the times be dark and dreary,
Though the way be long,
Keep your spirits bright and cheery,-
- 'Bide a wee, and dinna weary!'
Is a heartsome song.
...

You that still have your sight,
Remember me!-
I risked my life, I lost my eyes,
That you might see.
...

Each sin has its door of entrance.
Keep- that- door- closed!
Bolt it tight!
Just outside, the wild beast crouches
...

I hear a clear voice calling, calling,
Calling out of the night,
O, you who live in the Light of Life,
Bring us the Light!
...

Burden-bearers are we all,
Great and small.
Burden-sharers be ye all,
Great and small!
...

Christ stands at the bar of the world to-day,
As He stood in the days of old.
And still, as then, we do betray
Our Lord for greed of gold.
...

Our Boys Who Have Gone to the Front


('Be christs!'- was one of W. T. Stead's favourite sayings. Not 'Be like Christ!'- but- 'Be christs!' And he used the word no doubt in its original meaning,- anointed, ordained, chosen.
...

'Comfort ye, my people!'
Saith your God,-
'And be ye comforted!
And- be- ye- comforted!'
...

20.

Not what, but WHOM, I do believe,
That, in my darkest hour of need,
Hath comfort that no mortal creed
To mortal man may give;-
...

William Arthur Dunkerley Biography

William Arthur Dunkerley (12 November 1852 – 23 January 1941) was a prolific English journalist, novelist and poet. He was born in Manchester, spent a short time after his marriage in America before moving to Ealing, west London, where he served as deacon and teacher at the Ealing Congregational Church from the 1880s, and he then moved to Worthing in Sussex in 1922, where he became the town's mayor. He wrote under his own name, and also as John Oxenham for his poetry, hymn-writing, and novels. His poetry includes Bees in Amber: a little book of thoughtful verse (1913) which became a bestseller. He also wrote the poem Greatheart. He used another pseudonym, Julian Ross, for journalism. Dunkerley was a major contributor to Jerome K. Jerome's The Idler magazine. He had two sons and four daughters, of whom the eldest, and eldest child, Elsie Jeanette, became well known as a children's writer, particularly through her Abbey Series of girls' school stories. Another daughter, Erica, also used the Oxenham pen-name. The elder son, Roderic Dunkerley, had several titles published under his own name.)

The Best Poem Of William Arthur Dunkerley

Victory Day

As sure as God's in His Heaven,
As sure as He stands for Right,
As sure as the hun this wrong hath done,
So surely we win this fight!

Then!-
Then, the visioned eye shall see
The great and noble company,
That gathers there from land and sea,
From over-land and over-sea,
From under-land and under-sea,
To celebrate right royally
The Day of Victory.

Not alone on that great day,
Will the war-worn victors come,
To meet our great glad 'Welcome Home!'
And a whole world's deep 'Well done!'
Not alone! Not alone will they come,
To the sound of the pipe and the drum;
They will come to their own
With the pipe and the drum,
With the merry merry tune
Of the pipe and the drum;-
But- they- will- not- come- alone!

In their unseen myriads there,
Unperceived, but no less there,
In the vast of God's own air,
They will come!-
With never a pipe or a drum,
All the flower of Christendom,
In a silence more majestic,-
They will come! They will come!
The unknown and the known,
To meet our deep 'Well done!'
And the world-resounding thunders
Of our great glad 'Welcome Home!'

With their faces all alight,
And their brave eyes shining bright,
From their glorious martyrdom,
They will come!
They will once more all unite
With their comrades of the fight,
To share the world's delight
In the Victory of Right,
And the doom- the final doom-
The final, full, and everlasting doom
Of brutal Might,
They will come!

At the world-convulsing boom
Of the treacherous Austrian gun,-
At the all-compelling 'Come!'
Of that deadly signal-gun,-
They gauged the peril, and they came.
- Of many a race, and many a name,
But all ablaze with one white flame,
They tarried not to count the cost,
But came.
They came from many a clime and coast,-
The slim of limb, the dark of face,
They shouldered eager in the race
The sturdy giants of the frost,
And the stalwarts of the sun,-
Britons, Britons, Britons are they!
Britons, every one!
It shall be their life-long boast,
That they counted not the cost,
But, at the Mother-Country's call, they came.
They came a wrong to right,
They came to end the blight
Of a vast ungodly might;
And by their gallant coming overcame.
Britons, Britons, Britons are they!
Britons, every one!

It shall be their nobler boast,-
It shall spell their endless fame,-
That, regardless of the cost,
They won the world for Righteousness,
And cleansed it of its shame.
Britons, Britons, Britons are they!
Britons, every one!

And now,- again they come,
With merry pipe and drum,
Amid the storming cheers,
And the grateful-streaming tears,
Of this our great, glad, sorrowing Welcome-Home.
They shall every one be there,
On the earth or in the air,
From the land and from the sea,
And from under-land and sea,
Not a man shall missing be
From the past and present fighting-strength
Of that great company.
Those who lived, and those who died,
They were one in noble pride
Of desperate endeavour and of duty nobly done;
For their lives they risked and gave
Very Soul of Life to save,
And by their own great valour, and the Grace of God, they won.
Britons, Britons, Britons are they!-
Britons, every one!

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