| Glenn Watkins - 2002 - 628 pages
...Busoni (London, 1974J, 23o. 33. Rudyard Kipling, For All We Have and Are (London, [1914?]J, stanza i: "For all we have and are, / For all our children's fate, / Stand up and take the war. / The Hun is at the gate! " 34. In the same issue of Le mot, 15 June 1915, Cocteau joined... | |
| Union européenne des arabisants et islamisants. Congress, Stefan Leder - 2002 - 568 pages
...editor published an Arabic translation of a poem by Rudyard Kipling, which reminds one of the poem: "For all we have and are For all our children's fate Stand up and take the war The Hun is at the gate!"14 Nasib Arida is not less vehement in the last four lines of... | |
| C. S. Lewis - 2004 - 1086 pages
...Kipling composed for the occasion. The first verse of the poem, 'For All We Have and Are', is as follows: For all we have and are, For all our children's fate,...Stand up and meet the war, The Hun is at the gate! Our world has passed away In wantonness o'erthrown. There is nothing left to-day But steel and fire... | |
| Josephine B. Curry, Lester J. Bartson - 2004 - 594 pages
...I've learned about courage I've learned from Britons. "For all we have and are — " How does it go? "For all we have and are, For all our children's fate, Stand up and take the war. The Hun is at the gate! Our world has passed away In wantonness o'erthrown. There is... | |
| Bob Gingrich - 2006 - 262 pages
...way past time for Christians to wake up. Rudyard Kipling defined the problem for us many years ago: For all we have and are, For all our children's fate, Stand up and take the war. The Hun is at the gate! It's time to reclaim our identity as a nation established on... | |
| John Man - 2006 - 350 pages
...loss of the 'Oxford of Belgium', at the hands of 'the Huns'. Kipling himself urged Britain into war: For all we have and are For all our children's fate, Stand up and take the war. The Hun is at the gate! Nor was this reaction confined to the British. The 'Flames of... | |
| Bob Gingrich - 2006 - 261 pages
...way past time for Christians to wake up. Rudyard Kipling defined the problem for us many years ago: For all we have and are, For all our children's fate, Stand up and take the war. The Hun is at the gate! It's time to reclaim our identity as a nation established on... | |
| John Ayto - 2006 - 257 pages
...China that no Chinaman will ever again even dare to look askance at a German'"). 1914 Rudyard Kipling: Stand up and meet the war. The Hun is at the gate! 1915 Da//y Ma/7: She [sc. a Norfolk girl] told me how the eldest [brother 'at the front'] had held... | |
| Richard Gardiner Casey Baron Casey - 2008 - 276 pages
...Assistant to the President, 1941. 'I think, if I were you, I'd put the Dominions in your wife's name.' 'For all we have and are For all our children's fate Stand up and take the war. The Hun is at the gate!' (Kipling: 1914) I thought that 'For all we have and are' ended... | |
| 1919 - 500 pages
...Probably nothing that he has written during the War is so well known as his stirring call to arms in 1914, "For all we have and are For all our children's fate,...Stand up and meet the war, The Hun is at the gate!". . It was easy in the far-off days before the War to label Kipling's warnings and enthusiasms as "jingo,"... | |
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