The Last of the Light Brigade by Rudyard Kipling

"The Last of the Light Brigade" is a poem written in 1890 by Rudyard Kipling echoing – forty years after the event – Alfred Tennyson's famous poem The Charge of the Light Brigade. Employing synecdoche, Kipling uses his poem to expose the terrible hardship faced in old age by veterans of the Crimean War, as exemplified by the cavalry men of the light brigade who charged at the Battle of Balaclava.

Reception
Unlike Tennyson's poem, and like first-person accounts of the Light Brigade, Kipling's poem was largely ignored.

Poem
The Last of the Light Brigade
 * ~Rudyard Kipling


 * There were thirty million English who talked of England's might,
 * There were twenty broken troopers who lacked a bed for the night.
 * They had neither food nor money, they had neither service nor trade;
 * They were only shiftless soldiers, the last of the Light Brigade.


 * They felt that life was fleeting; they knew not that art was long,
 * That though they were dying of famine, they lived in deathless song.
 * They asked for a little money to keep the wolf from the door;
 * And the thirty million English sent twenty pounds and four!


 * They laid their heads together that were scarred and lined and grey;
 * Keen were the Russian sabres, but want was keener than they;
 * And an old Troop-Sergeant muttered, "Let us go to the man who writes
 * The things on Balaclava the kiddies at school recites."


 * They went without bands or colours, a regiment ten-file strong,
 * To look for the Master-singer who had crowned them all in his song;
 * And, waiting his servant's order, by the garden gate they stayed,
 * A desolate little cluster, the last of the Light Brigade.


 * They strove to stand to attention, to straighten the toil-bowed back;
 * They drilled on an empty stomach, the loose-knit files fell slack;
 * With stooping of weary shoulders, in garments tattered and frayed,
 * They shambled into his presence, the last of the Light Brigade.


 * The old Troop-Sergeant was spokesman, and "Beggin' your pardon," he said,
 * "You wrote o' the Light Brigade, sir. Here's all that isn't dead.
 * An' it's all come true what you wrote, sir, regardin' the mouth of hell;
 * For we're all of us nigh to the workhouse, an' we thought we'd call an' tell.


 * "No, thank you, we don't want food, sir; but couldn't you take an' write
 * A sort of 'to be continued' and 'see next page' o' the fight?
 * We think that someone has blundered, an' couldn't you tell 'em how?
 * You wrote we were heroes once, sir. Please, write we are starving now."


 * The poor little army departed, limping and lean and forlorn.
 * And the heart of the Master-singer grew hot with "the scorn of scorn."
 * And he wrote for them wonderful verses that swept the land like flame,
 * Till the fatted souls of the English were scourged with the thing called Shame.


 * They sent a cheque to the felon that sprang from an Irish bog;
 * They healed the spavined cab-horse; they housed the homeless dog;
 * And they sent (you may call me a liar), when felon and beast were paid,
 * A cheque, for enough to live on, to the last of the Light Brigade.*


 * O thirty million English that babble of England's might,
 * Behold there are twenty heroes who lack their food to-night;
 * Our children's children are lisping to "honour the charge they made - "
 * And we leave to the streets and the workhouse the charge of the Light Brigade!


 * *this para was present in the fist collection but was removed from the later edition.