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Voices of Silence

Page 31

by Vivien Noakes


  ‘Dust to the dust’, without a single prayer

  Save, mayhap, one that Pity murmured there.

  But Pity’s voice is never very loud,

  And we are used to seeing comrades die,

  And leaving them, perforce, just where they lie.

  Thy Hand doth clothe the lily, warm the day;

  Sol’s cloth of gold most tenderly is drawn

  Across the opalescent robes of Dawn;

  Yet see, O, God! this mass of trampled clay,

  These gaping wounds, these bodies shrapnel-torn.

  Vengeance is Thine! Let vengeance now be sworn.

  Colin Mitchell

  Aftermath

  With steady, silent tread,

  Bearing aloft their dead, –

  One at the foot, one at the head, –

  The stretcher-bearers go;

  Out of the dark they come

  Stumbling and staggering, some

  Bearing, maybe, a chum,

  Pair after pair they go.

  Vague silhouetted ghosts

  Remnants of martyr’d hosts;

  Think on the blatant toasts

  Raised to ‘King Glory’;

  Tread lightly, – that’s the way,

  Wake not the dead, lest they

  Have other words to say of the same story!

  D. Howard Tripp

  Before Battle

  I heard them sing of home last night,

  A song of Devon they loved so well,

  As they were marching to the fight –

  Along the Flanders road to hell . . .

  I scarce can think ’twas yesterday

  Those laughing lads could laugh and sing,

  For now their dear boy lips are grey,

  And Devon has made her offering.

  Their song is dead, but that sweet strain

  Still gathering charms unknown before,

  Will make a music in my brain,

  And haunt my heart for evermore.

  Raymond Heywood

  Comrades

  Those whom I’ve known, admired, ardently friended

  Lie silent there wrapp’d in a soldier’s shroud;

  Death broke their dreams, their aspirations ended,

  These sanguine youth, noble, brave and proud.

  Slowly they bear them ’neath the dim star light

  Unto their rest – the soldiers’ cemetery:

  The chaplain chants a low, brief litany;

  The nightingale flings rapture on the night.

  Back to their Mother Earth this night return

  Unnumbered youth along the far-flung line;

  But ’tis for these my eyes with feeling burn,

  That Memory doth erect a fadeless shrine –

  For these I’ve known, admired, ardently friended

  Stood by when Death their love, their youth swift ended.

  John W. Streets

  The Soldier

  ’Tis strange to look on a man that is dead

  As he lies in the shell-swept hell,

  And to think that the poor black battered corpse

  Once lived like you and was well.

  ’Tis stranger far when you come to think

  That you may be soon like him . . .

  And it’s Fear that tugs at your trembling soul,

  A Fear that is weird and grim!

  Hamish Mann

  Worm

  Thou thing –

  Slimy and crawling

  Oozing along.

  Not brown,

  As men’s eyes see

  But reddish green,

  And moist.

  Death meaning nought

  To thee.

  Who livest

  And breedest

  During many aeons

  Billions more yellow horrors

  Like thyself.

  Oh, Hell!

  From the Line

  Have you seen men come from the Line,

  Tottering, doddering, as if bad wine

  Had drugged their very souls;

  Their garments rent with holes

  And caked with mud

  And streaked with blood

  Of others, or their own;

  Haggard, weary-limbed and chilled to the bone,

  Trudging aimless, hopeless, on

  With listless eyes and faces drawn

  Taut with woe?

  Have you seen them aimless go

  Bowed down with muddy pack

  And muddy rifle slung on back,

  And soaking overcoat,

  Staring on with eyes that note

  Nothing but the mire

  Quenched of every fire?

  Have you seen men when they come

  From shell-holes filled with scum

  Of mud and blood and flesh,

  Where there’s nothing fresh

  Like grass, or trees, or flowers,

  And the numbing year-like hours

  Lag on – drag on,

  And the hopeless dawn

  Brings naught but death, and rain –

  The rain a fiend of pain

  That scourges without end,

  And Death, a smiling friend?

  Have you seen men when they come from hell?

  If not, – ah, well

  Speak not with easy eloquence

  That seems like sense

  Of ‘War and its Necessity’!

  And do not rant, I pray,

  On ‘War’s Magnificent Nobility’!

  If you’ve seen men come from the Line

  You’ll know it’s Peace that is divine!

  If you’ve not seen the things I’ve sung –

  Let silence bind your tongue,

  But, make all wars to cease,

  And work, and work for Everlasting peace!

  R. Watson Kerr

  After the Battle

  So they are satisfied with our Brigade,

  And it remains to parcel out the bays!

  And we shall have the usual Thanks Parade,

  The beaming General, and the soapy praise.

  You will come up in your capacious car

  To find your heroes sulking in the rain,

  To tell us how magnificent we are,

  And how you hope we’ll do the same again.

  And we, who knew your old abusive tongue,

  Who heard you hector us a week before,

  We who have bled to boost you up a rung –

  A K.C.B. perhaps, perhaps a Corps —;

  We who must mourn those spaces in the Mess,

  And somehow fill the hollows in the heart,

  We do not want your Sermon on Success,

  Your greasy benisons on Being Smart.

  We only want to take our wounds away

  To some shy village where the tumult ends,

  And drowsing in the sunshine many a day,

  Forget our aches, forget that we had friends.

  Weary we are of blood and noise and pain;

  This was a week we shall not soon forget;

  And if, indeed, we have to fight again,

  We little wish to think about it yet.

  We have done well; we like to hear it said.

  Say it, and then, for God’s sake, say no more.

  Fight, if you must, fresh battles far ahead,

  But keep them dark behind your château door!

  A.P. Herbert

  Statesmen Debonair

  O ye statesmen debonair,

  With the partings in your hair;

  Statesmen, ye who do your bit

  In the arm-chairs where you sit;

  You with top-hats on your head

  Even when you lie in bed;

  O superbly happy, ye,

  Traders in Humanity;

  Every time you smile, sweet friends,

  A moan goes up, a plague descends.

  Every time you show your teeth,

  A hundred swords desert the sheath.

  Every time you pare your nails,
r />   The manhood of a city fails.

  Every time you dip your pen,

  You slaughter ten platoons of men.

  For every glass of port you hold

  Blood is spilt ten thousandfold . . .

  O ye statesmen debonair,

  With the partings in your hair;

  O ye statesmen pink and white,

  Sleep like little lambs to-night.

  Louis Golding

  The New Trade

  In the market-place they have made

  A dolorous new trade.

  Now you will see in the fierce naphtha-light,

  Piled hideously to sight,

  Dead limbs of men bronzed in the over-seas,

  Bomb-wrenched from elbows and knees;

  Torn feet, that would, unwearied by harsh loads,

  Have tramped steep moorlands roads;

  Torn hands that would have moulded exquisitely

  Rare things for God to see.

  And there are eyes there – blue like blue doves’ wings,

  Black like the Libyan kings,

  Grey as before-dawn rivers, willow-stirred,

  Brown as a singing-bird;

  But all stare from the dark into the dark,

  Reproachful, tense, and stark,

  Eyes heaped on trays and in broad baskets there,

  Feet, hands, and ropes of hair.

  In the market-places . . . and women buy . . .

  . . . Naphtha glares . . . hawkers cry . . .

  Fat men rub hands . . .

  O God, O just God, send

  Plague, lightnings . . .

  Make an end!

  Louis Golding

  Rain

  Ah! when it rains all day

  And the sky is a mist

  That creeps by chillily

  Where sun once kissed,

  Like death pale shroud,

  My soul cries out aloud

  In hopeless misery.

  I cannot read nor write

  A line for gloom,

  My life lags, drenched of light

  To cheer its tomb;

  Chill and wet,

  Comfortless I fret

  In hopeless night!

  And naught to hear but rain

  Battering the ground!

  O numbing pain!

  O maddening sound!

  Drowned in sky

  Trees drip, drip, and sigh

  And drip, drip, again.

  R. Watson Kerr

  A Vignette

  On stark and tortured wire

  Where refuse of war lies

  Tangled in mire –

  When God is flinging

  Rain down the skies –

  Sit three little birds, singing.

  R. Watson Kerr

  The Flanders Rain

  Watching the rain dry up,

  Watching the rain dry up,

  We stick and slip in Flanders mud

  Till camouflaged just like a spud,

  Watching the rain dry up.

  Plastered from hoof to crown;

  And when we’ve watched all the rain dry up,

  We watch all the rain come down.

  The Song of the Mud

  This is the song of the mud,

  The pale yellow glistening mud that covers the hills like satin;

  The grey gleaming silvery mud that is spread like enamel over the valleys;

  The frothing, squirting, spurting, liquid mud that gurgles along the road beds;

  The thick elastic mud that is kneaded and pounded and squeezed under the hoofs of the horses;

  The invincible, inexhaustible mud of the war zone.

  This is the song of the mud, the uniform of the poilu.

  His coat is of mud, his great dragging flapping coat, that is too big for him and too heavy;

  His coat that once was blue and now is grey and stiff with the mud that cakes to it.

  This is the mud that clothes him.

  His trousers and boots are of mud,

  And his skin is of mud;

  And there is mud in his beard.

  His head is crowned with a helmet of mud.

  He wears it well.

  He wears it as a king wears the ermine that bores him.

  He has set a new style in clothing;

  He has introduced the chic of mud.

  This is the song of the mud that wriggles its way into battle.

  The impertinent, the intrusive, the ubiquitous, the unwelcome,

  The slimy inveterate nuisance,

  That fills the trenches,

  That mixes in with the food of the soldiers,

  That spoils the working of motors and crawls into their secret parts,

  That spreads itself over the guns,

  That sucks the guns down and holds them fast in its slimy voluminous lips,

  That has no respect for destruction and muzzles the bursting of shells;

  And slowly, softly, easily,

  Soaks up the fire, the noise; soaks up the energy and the courage;

  Soaks up the power of armies;

  Soaks up the battle.

  Just soaks it up and thus stops it.

  This is the hymn of mud – the obscene, the filthy, the putrid,

  The vast liquid grave of our armies.

  It has drowned our men.

  Its monstrous distended belly reeks with the undigested dead.

  Our men have gone into it, sinking slowly, and struggling and slowly disappearing.

  Our fine men, our brave, strong, young men;

  Our glowing red, shouting, brawny men.

  Slowly, inch by inch, they have gone down into it,

  Into its darkness, its thickness, its silence.

  Slowly, irresistibly, it drew them down, sucked them down,

  And they were drowned in thick, bitter, heaving mud.

  Now it hides them, Oh, so many of them!

  Under its smooth glistening surface it is hiding them blandly.

  There is not a trace of them.

  There is no mark where they went down.

  The mute enormous mouth of the mud has closed over them.

  This is the song of the mud,

  The beautiful glistening golden mud that covers the hills like satin;

  The mysterious gleaming silvery mud that is spread like enamel over the valleys.

  Mud, the disguise of the war zone;

  Mud, the mantle of battles;

  Mud, the smooth fluid grave of our soldiers:

  This is the song of the mud.

  Mary Borden

  Mad

  Neck-deep in mud,

  He mowed and raved –

  He who had braved

  The field of blood –

  And as a lad

  Just out of school

  Yelled: ‘April fool!’

  And laughed like mad.

  Wilfred W. Gibson

  Carrying-Party

  Time 10.30 p.m. Place, Communication Trenches.

  Wire over’ead!

  Mud underfoot:

  Gawd, I’m into a hole,

  Pullin’ the sole

  Right off’en me boot –

  I wish I was dead!

  Wire over’ead –

  (My load weighs like lead)

  The night’s black as ’ell;

  I’m into a ditch –

  Ye son of a bitch!

  ’Twas here Nelson fell –

  Bang! There goes a shell –

  I wish I was dead!

  Wire over’ead –

  Look out for the bridge!

  Hear ole Sergeant grunt,

  ‘Halt! you there in front!

  They’ve lost touch at the ridge’ –

  I wish I was dead!

  Wire over’ead!

  Wire underfoot! –

  There’s Tim come to grief –

  Christ! – he’s dumping the beef.

  Pull ’im out by the root:

  I wish I was dead –

  (
To home blokes are in bed) –

  Wish Gawd I was dead!

  (Stumbles and grumbles on.)

  Joseph Lee

  The Fatal Wooden Track

  In a place not far from Ypres,

  Just a little further back,

  By the name of Warrington Road, sir,

  Better known as the Wooden Track.

  If you went through the whole of Belgium,

  Or along to the Somme and back,

  There is no place so full of terror

  As that awful Wooden Track.

  ’Tis vivid in our memory,

  As here we try to tell,

  There is no place to compare it

  Not even that place called Hell.

  So oft is it a driver’s duty

  Of the columns further back

  To carry ammunition

  Along that fatal track.

  And when they get the order

  To be ready sharp at nine,

  You will see the drivers mounted

  And ready for the line.

  But still it is their duty,

  As everyone should know,

  And though death should await them,

  Forward they will go.

  For our guns are always calling

  For shells both night and day,

  And as they near the place, sir,

  They think of home and pray.

  They pray to God in Heaven

  To bring them safely back,

  And give them strength and courage,

  When once they are on the track.

  ’Tis now that they need that courage

  As they gallop up that track,

  Though the shells may fall like hail, sir,

  There is no turning back.

  Though tragic in its splendour

  Is the scene that meets the eye,

  The bravest and the best, sir,

  Have gone there, alas! to die.

  ’Tis a scene of sterling courage

  Most awful to behold,

  And the bravest men amongst us

  Felt their very blood run cold.

  Seen from an Aid-Post

  There are many roads in Flanders, where the horses slide and fall,

  There are roads of mud and pavé that lead nowhere at all,

  They are roads that finish at our trench; the Germans hold the rest.

  But of all the roads in Flanders, there is one I know the best.

 

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