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The War Prayer
By Mark Twain
Twain
apparently dictated "The
War Prayer" around
1904-05; it
was found after his
death among his
unpublished manuscripts.
The actual prayer is
also sometimes seen in
poem form.
It was a time of great and exalting
excitement. The country
was up in arms, the war
was on, in every breast
burned the holy fire of
patriotism; the drums
were beating, the bands
playing, the toy pistols
popping, the bunched
firecrackers hissing and
spluttering; on every
hand and far
down
the receding and fading
spread of roofs and
balconies a fluttering
wilderness of flags
flashed in the sun;
daily the young
volunteers marched down
the wide avenue gay and
fine in their new
uniforms, the proud
fathers and mothers and
sisters and sweethearts
cheering them with
voices choked with happy
emotion as they swung
by; nightly the packed
mass meetings listened,
panting, to patriot
oratory which stirred
the deepest deeps of
their hearts, and which
they interrupted at
briefest intervals with
cyclones of applause,
the tears running down
their cheeks the while;
in the churches the
pastors preached
devotion to flag and
country, and invoked the
God of Battles
beseeching His aid in
our good cause in
outpourings of fervid
eloquence which moved
every listener. It was
indeed a glad and
gracious time, and the
half dozen rash spirits
that ventured to
disapprove of the war
and cast a doubt upon
its righteousness
straightway got such a
stern and angry warning
that for their personal
safety's sake they
quickly shrank out of
sight and offended no
more in that way.
Sunday morning came --
next day the battalions
would leave for the
front; the church was
filled; the volunteers
were there, their young
faces alight with
martial dreams --
visions of the stern
advance, the gathering
momentum, the rushing
charge, the flashing
sabers, the flight of
the foe, the tumult, the
enveloping smoke, the
fierce pursuit, the
surrender! Then home
from the war, bronzed
heroes, welcomed,
adored, submerged in
golden seas of glory!
With the volunteers sat
their dear ones, proud,
happy, and envied by the
neighbors and friends
who had no sons and
brothers to send forth
to the field of honor,
there to win for the
flag, or, failing, die
the noblest of noble
deaths. The service
proceeded; a war chapter
from the Old Testament
was read; the first
prayer was said; it was
followed by an organ
burst that shook the
building, and with one
impulse the house rose,
with glowing eyes and
beating hearts, and
poured out that
tremendous invocation
God the all-terrible!
Thou who ordainest!
Thunder thy clarion and
lightning thy sword!
Then came the "long"
prayer. None could
remember the like of it
for passionate pleading
and moving and beautiful
language. The burden of
its supplication was,
that an ever-merciful
and benignant Father of
us all would watch over
our noble young
soldiers, and aid,
comfort, and encourage
them in their patriotic
work; bless them, shield
them in the day of
battle and the hour of
peril, bear them in His
mighty hand, make them
strong and confident,
invincible in the bloody
onset; help them to
crush the foe, grant to
them and to their flag
and country imperishable
honor and glory --
An aged stranger entered
and moved with slow and
noiseless step up the
main aisle, his eyes
fixed upon the minister,
his long body clothed in
a robe that reached to
his feet, his head bare,
his white hair
descending in a frothy
cataract to his
shoulders, his seamy
face unnaturally pale,
pale even to
ghastliness. With all
eyes following him and
wondering, he made his
silent way; without
pausing, he ascended to
the preacher's side and
stood there waiting.
With shut lids the
preacher, unconscious of
his presence, continued
with his moving prayer,
and at last finished it
with the words, uttered
in fervent appeal,
"Bless our arms, grant
us the victory, O Lord
our God, Father and
Protector of our land
and flag!"
The stranger touched his
arm, motioned him to
step aside -- which the
startled minister did --
and took his place.
During some moments he
surveyed the spellbound
audience with solemn
eyes, in which burned an
uncanny light; then in a
deep voice he said:
"I come from the Throne
-- bearing a message
from Almighty God!" The
words smote the house
with a shock; if the
stranger perceived it he
gave no attention. "He
has heard the prayer of
His servant your
shepherd, and will grant
it if such shall be your
desire after I, His
messenger, shall have
explained to you its
import -- that is to
say, its full import.
For it is like unto many
of the prayers of men,
in that it asks for more
than he who utters it is
aware of -- except he
pause and think.
"God's servant and yours
has prayed his prayer.
Has he paused and taken
thought? Is it one
prayer? No, it is two --
one uttered, the other
not. Both have reached
the ear of Him Who
heareth all
supplications, the
spoken and the unspoken.
Ponder this -- keep it
in mind. If you would
beseech a blessing upon
yourself, beware! lest
without intent you
invoke a curse upon a
neighbor at the same
time. If you pray for
the blessing of rain
upon your crop which
needs it, by that act
you are possibly praying
for a curse upon some
neighbor's crop which
may not need rain and
can be injured by it.
"You have heard your
servant's prayer -- the
uttered part of it. I am
commissioned of God to
put into words the other
part of it -- that part
which the pastor -- and
also you in your hearts
-- fervently prayed
silently. And ignorantly
and unthinkingly? God
grant that it was so!
You heard these words:
'Grant us the victory, O
Lord our God!' That is
sufficient. the whole of
the uttered prayer is
compact into those
pregnant words.
Elaborations were not
necessary. When you have
prayed for victory you
have prayed for many
unmentioned results
which follow victory --
must follow it, cannot
help but follow it. Upon
the listening spirit of
God fell also the
unspoken part of the
prayer. He commandeth me
to put it into words.
Listen!
"O Lord our Father, our
young patriots, idols of
our hearts, go forth to
battle -- be Thou near
them! With them -- in
spirit -- we also go
forth from the sweet
peace of our beloved
fire sides to smite the
foe. O Lord our God,
help us to tear their
soldiers to bloody
shreds with our shells;
help us to cover their
smiling fields with the
pale forms of their
patriot dead; help us to
drown the thunder of the
guns with the shrieks of
their wounded, writhing
in pain; help us to lay
waste their humble homes
with a hurricane of
fire; help us to wring
the hearts of their
unoffending widows with
unavailing grief; help
us to turn them out
roofless with little
children to wander
unfriended the wastes of
their desolated land in
rags and hunger and
thirst, sports of the
sun flames of summer and
the icy winds of winter,
broken in spirit, worn
with travail, imploring
Thee for the refuge of
the grave and denied it
-- for our sakes who
adore Thee, Lord, blast
their hopes, blight
their lives, protract
their bitter pilgrimage,
make heavy their steps,
water their way with
their tears, stain the
white snow with the
blood of their wounded
feet! We ask it, in the
spirit of love, of Him
Who is the Source of
Love, and Who is the
ever-faithful refuge and
friend of all that are
sore beset and seek His
aid with humble and
contrite hearts. Amen.
[After a pause. ] "Ye
have prayed it; if ye
still desire it, speak!
-- The messenger of the
Most High waits!"
It was believed
afterward that the man
was a lunatic, because
there was no sense in
what he said.
Bonus:
This is an excerpt from
chapter 9 of the
unfinished work "THE
MYSTERIOUS STRANGER"
by Mark Twain. It was
published posthumously
in 1916. This was copied
from
here.
..................
"There has never been a
just one, never an
honorable one - on the
part of the instigator
of the war. I can see a
million years ahead, and
this rule will never
change in so many as
half a dozen instances.
The loud little handful
- as usual - will shout
for the war. The pulpit
will - warily and
cautiously - object - at
first; the great, big,
dull bulk of the nation
will rub its sleepy eyes
and try to make out why
there should be a war,
and will say, earnestly
and indignantly, "It is
unjust and dishonorable,
and here is no necessity
for it." Then the
handful will shout
louder. A few fair men
on the other side will
argue and reason against
the war with speech and
pen, and at first will
have a hearing and be
applauded; but it will
not last long; those
others will out shout
them, and presently the
anti-war audiences will
thin out and lose
popularity. Before long
you will see this
curious thing: the
speakers stoned from the
platform, and free
speech strangled by
hordes of furious men
who in their secret
hearts are still at one
with those stoned
speakers - as earlier -
but do not dare to say
so. And now the whole
nation - pulpit and all
- will take up the
war-cry, and shout
itself hoarse, and mob
any honest man who
ventures to open his
mouth; and presently
such mouths will cease
to open. Next the
statesmen will invent
cheap lies, putting the
blame upon the nation
that is attacked, and
every man will be glad
of those
conscience-soothing
falsities, and will
diligently study them,
and refuse to examine
any refutations of them;
and thus he will by and
by convince himself that
the war is just, and
will thank God for the
better sleep he enjoys
after this process of
grotesque
self-deception."
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