After the Battle

( " Mon pere, ce heros au sourire si doux. " )

My father, hero of benignant mien,
On horseback visited the gory scene,
After the battle as the evening fell,
And took with him a trooper loved right well,
Because of bravery and presence bold.
The field was covered with the dead, all cold,
And shades of night were deepening: came a sound,
Feeble and hoarse, from something on the ground;
It was a Spaniard of the vanquished force,
Who dragged himself with pain beside their course;
Wounded and bleeding, livid and half dead,
" Give me to drink — in pity, drink! " he said.
My father, touched, stretched to his follower now,
A flask of rum that from his saddle-bow
Hung down: " The poor soul — give him drink, " said he.
But while the trooper prompt, obediently
Stooped towards the other, he of Moorish race
Pointed a pistol at my father's face,
And with a savage oath the trigger drew;
The hat flew off, a bullet passing through.
As swerved his charger in a backward stride,
" Give him to drink the same, " my father cried.
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Author of original: 
Victor Hugo
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