The charge at Balaklava

James Barron Hope

Nolan halted where the squadrons,
  Stood impatient of delay,
  Out he drew his brief dispatches,
  Which their leader quickly snatches,
  At a glance their meaning catches;
  They are ordered to the fray!

  All that morning they had waited—
  As their frowning faces showed,
  Horses stamping, riders fretting,
  And their teeth together setting;
  Not a single sword-blade wetting
  As the battle ebbed and flowed.

  Now the fevered spell is broken,
  Every man feels twice as large,
  Every heart is fiercely leaping,
  As a lion roused from sleeping,
  For they know they will be sweeping
  In a moment to the charge.

  Brightly gleam six hundred sabres,
    And the brazen trumpets ring;
  Steeds are gathered, spurs are driven,
  And the heavens widely riven
  With a mad shout upward given,
    Scaring vultures on the wing.

  Stern its meaning; was not Gallia
    Looking down on Albion's sons?
  In each mind this thought implanted,
  Undismayed and all undaunted,
  By the battle-fiends enchanted,
    They ride down upon the guns.

  Onward! On! the chargers trample;
    Quicker falls each iron heel!
  And the headlong pace grows faster;
  Noble steed and noble master,
  Rushing on to red disaster,
    Where the heavy cannons peal.

  In the van rides Captain Nolan;
    Soldier stout he was and brave!
  And his shining sabre flashes,
  As upon the foe he dashes:
  God! his face turns white as ashes,
    He has ridden to his grave!

  Down he fell, prone from his saddle,
    Without motion, without breath,
  Never more a trump to waken—
  He the very first one taken,
  From the bough so sorely shaken,
    In the vintage-time of Death.

  In a moment, in a twinkling,
    He was gathered to his rest;
  In the time for which he'd waited—
  With his gallant heart elated—
  Down went Nolan, decorated
    With a death wound on his breast.

  Comrades still are onward charging,
    He is lying on the sod:
  Onward still their steeds are rushing
  Where the shot and shell are crushing;
  From his corpse the blood is gushing,
    And his soul is with his God.

  As they spur on, what strange visions
    Flit across each rider's brain!
  Thoughts of maidens fair, of mothers,
  Friends and sisters, wives and brothers,
  Blent with images of others,
    Whom they ne'er shall see again.

  Onward still the squadrons thunder—
    Knightly hearts were their's and brave,
  Men and horses without number
  All the furrowed ground encumber—
  Falling fast to their last slumber—
    Bloody slumber! bloody grave!

  Of that charge at Balaklava—
    In its chivalry sublime—
  Vivid, grand, historic pages
  Shall descend to future ages;
  Poets, painters, hoary sages
    Shall record it for all time;

  Telling how those English horsemen
    Rode the Russian gunners down;
  How with ranks all torn and shattered;
  How with helmets hacked and battered;
  How with sword arms blood-bespattered;
    They won honor and renown.

  'Twas "not war," but it was splendid
    As a dream of old romance;
  Thinking which their Gallic neighbors
  Thrilled to watch them at their labors,
  Hewing red graves with their sabres
    In that wonderful advance.

  Down went many a gallant soldier;
    Down went many a stout dragoon;
  Lying grim, and stark, and gory,
  On the crimson field of glory,
  Leaving us a noble story
    And their white-cliffed home a boon.

  Full of hopes and aspirations
    Were their hearts at dawn of day;
  Now, with forms all rent and broken,
  Bearing each some frightful token
  Of a scene ne'er to be spoken,
    In their silent sleep they lay.

  Here a noble charger stiffens,
    There his rider grasps the hilt
  Of his sabre lying bloody
  By his side, upon the muddy,
  Trampled ground, which darkly ruddy
    Shows the blood that he has spilt.

  And to-night the moon shall shudder
    As she looks down on the moor,
  Where the dead of hostile races
  Slumber, slaughtered in their places;
  All their rigid ghastly faces
    Spattered hideously with gore.

  And the sleepers! ah, the sleepers
    Make a Westminster that day;
  'Mid the seething battle's lava!
  And each man who fell shall have a
  Proud inscription—BALAKLAVA,
    Which shall never fade away.

This poem is about the cavalry charge of the British Light Brigade on the Russian guns at Balaclava on 25th October 1854. It makes an interesting comparison to the much more famous poem The Charge of the Light Brigade, by Tennyson.