Every Man Should Have a Rifle
Every Man Should Have a Rifle - meaning Summary
Preparedness Before the Coming War
Lawson’s poem urges practical, quiet preparedness for an anticipated war: ordinary tradesmen, clerks and peasants should keep a rifle and ammunition ready. It rejects public spectacle, rallies or grand rhetoric, imagining instead a sober, disciplined mobilization while political voices fail to heed warnings. The tone is ominous and pragmatic, stressing individual responsibility and readiness in a tense, uncelebrated present.
Read Complete AnalysesSo I sit and write and ponder, while the house is deaf and dumb, Seeing visions over yonder of the war I know must come. In the corner – not a vision – but a sign for coming days Stand a box of ammunition and a rifle in green baize. And in this, the living present, let the word go through the land, Every tradesman, clerk and peasant should have these two things at hand. No – no ranting song is needed, and no meeting, flag or fuss – In the future, still unheeded, shall the spirit come to us! Without feathers, drum or riot on the day that is to be, We shall march down, very quiet, to our stations by the sea. While the bitter parties stifle every voice that warns of war, Every man should own a rifle and have cartridges in store!
 
					
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