“Friends, wives and husbands, sons and daughters, dead
Of plague, famine, and arrows: and the houses
Battered unsafe by cannonades of stone
Hurled in by the Assyrians: the town-walls
Crumbling out of their masonry into mounds
Of foolish earth, so smitten by the rams:
The hunger-pangs, the thirst like swallowed lime
Forcing them gulp green water maggot-quick
That lurks in corners of dried cisterns: yea,
Murders done for a drink of blood, and flesh
Sodden of infants: and no hope alive
Of rescue from this heat of prisoning anguish
Until Assyrian swords drown it in death.”

Emblems of Love (1912)

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Do you have more details about the quote "Friends, wives and husbands, sons and daughters, dead Of plague, famine, and arrows: and the houses Battered unsafe b…" by Lascelles Abercrombie?
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Lascelles Abercrombie 3
Poet, academic, literary critic 1881–1938

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