NO SURRENDER OATES.
"It was blowing a blizzard. Oates said: 'I am just going outside, and I may be some time.' He went out into the blizzard, and we have not seen mm since."—The Diary of Captain Scott. "It was not in the fury of the foam, The swift, earth-shaking tumult, and the shout Of close-knit squadrons riding hard and home, That he went out. For him no trumpets called with jubilant blast, Only the ice-wind's everlasting moan; Alone into the solitude he passed, Yet not alone. For joyfully the long lino of his peers . Most joyfully those staunch okl bands and true, Which rode at Balaclava in far years,. And Waterloo. Warburg, and Paardeburg, and Dettingen, Watched him go out into the deathly wild, — Ay, many valiant souls of mighty men Saw that, and smiled. —Frank Taylor, in The Spectator. [The battles mentioned are those in which Oates's old regiment of the Inniskillings figured.]
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HNS19130802.2.75.1
Bibliographic details
Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume LXV, Issue LXV, 2 August 1913, Page 9
Word Count
155NO SURRENDER OATES. Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume LXV, Issue LXV, 2 August 1913, Page 9
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