Salute (poem)
"Salute" is a poem by the Australian writer Sydney Elliott Napier. During World War I he served with the First Australian Imperial Force. The poem was written when Napier was assistant editor of The Sydney Mail[1] and was first published in that paper on 21 April 1937.[2]
Use of the poem
In 2014 "Salute" was recited at the Dawn Service in Martin Place, Sydney by the Minister for Veterans Affairs, Victor Dominello.[3] In 2019 the poem was recited by the Premier of New South Wales, Gladys Berejiklian.[4][5]
Text of poem
YOU who have lov'd will remember
The sound of their farewell cheers
Soothing, but never arresting,
The march of your natural fears:
You who have lov'd will remember
The glow of their glad young years,
As you stand to-day to salute them —
In silence, with pride and with tears.
Out of the peace of the dawning
Into a fury of flame,
Up thro' the Valley of Shadow
To the light of the world they came,
And bright on the roll of the nations,
Broad on the banner of fame,
With the opulent blood of their youth-time
They painted Australia's name.
You who have lov'd, remember:
Tho' these whom you lov'd have died,
Tho' the wearying years move onward
And the ways of the world are wide;
Tho' Gallipoli's graves may hold them
And her whispering waters hide,
The years have no power to part you,
Nor the width of the world to divide;
And to-day, as you stand to salute them,
They, too, will be here, at your side!
References
- "JOURNALIST'S DEATH". The Sydney Morning Herald (31, 933). New South Wales, Australia. 4 May 1940. p. 17. Retrieved 3 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
- "SALUTE!". Sydney Mail. LI (1308). New South Wales, Australia. 21 April 1937. p. 13. Retrieved 1 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
- ANZAC DAY 2014 Sydney CBD Media Guide, p. 7
- ANZAC DAY 2019 Sydney CBD Media Guide (PDF), Returned Services League, 23 April 2019, p. 8, retrieved 1 May 2019
- Tim Barlass (25 April 2019). "Thousands gather in Martin Place for Anzac Day dawn service". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 1 May 2019.