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Dreamers
Soldiers are citizens of death’s grey land, Drawing no dividend from time’s to-morrows.In the great hour of destiny they stand, Each with his feuds, and jealousies, and sorrows.Soldiers are sworn to action; they must win Some flaming, fatal climax with their lives.Soldiers are dreamers; when the guns begin They think of firelit homes, clean beds and wives. I see them in foul dug-outs, gnawed by rats, And in the ruined trenches, lashed with rain,Dreaming of things they did with balls and bats, And mocked by hopeless longing to regainBank-holidays, and picture shows, and spats, And going to the office in the train. ‘Blighters’ The House is crammed: tier beyond tier they grinAnd cackle at the show, while prancing ranksOf harlots shrill the chorus, drunk with din;‘We’re sure the Kaiser loves our dear old Tanks!’ I’d like to see a tank come down the stalls,Lurching to rag-time tunes, or ‘Home sweet Home’,And there’d be no more jokes in music-hallsTo mock the riddled corpses round Bapaume. Night on the Convoy(Alexandria-Marseilles) Out in the blustering darkness, on the deckA gleam of stars looks down. Long blurs of black,The lean Destroyers, level with our track,Plunging and stealing, watch the perilous wayThrough backward racing seas and caverns of chill spray.One sentry by the davits, in the gloomStands mute: the boat heaves onward through the night.Shrouded is every chink of cabined light:And sluiced by floundering waves that hiss and boomAnd crash like guns, the troop-ship shudders...doom. Now something at my feet stirs with a sigh;And slowly growing used to groping dark,I know that the hurricane-deck, down all its length,Is heaped and spread with lads in sprawling strength-Blanketed soldiers sleeping. In the starkDanger of life at war, they lie so still,All prostrate and defenceless, head by head...And I remember Arras, and that hillWhere dumb with pain I stumbled among the dead. We are going home. The troop-ship, in a thrillOf fiery-chamber’d anguish, throbs and rolls.We are going home...victims...three thousand souls. Aftermath Have you forgotten yet?...For the world’s events have rumbled on since those gagged days,Like traffic checked while at a crossing of city-ways:And the haunted gap in your mind has filled with thoughts that flowLike clouds in the lit heaven of life; and you’re a man reprieved to go,Taking your peaceful share of Time, with joy to spare.But the past is just the same - and war’s a bloody game...Have you forgotten yet?...Look down, and swear by the slain of the war that you’ll never forget. Do you remember the dark months you held the sector at Mametz-The nights you watched and wired and dug and piled sandbags on parapets?Do you remember the rats; and the stenchOf corpses rotting in front of the front-line trench-And dawn coming, dirty-white, and chill with a hopeless rain?Do you ever stop to ask, ‘Is it all going to happen again?’ Do you remember that hour of din before the attack-And the anger, the blind compassion that seized and shook you thenAs you peered at the doomed and haggard faces of your men?Do you remember the stretcher-cases lurching backWith dying eyes and lolling heads - those ashen-greyMasks of the lads who once were keen and kind and gay? Have you forgotten yet?...Look up, and swear by the green of the spring that you’ll never forget. The General “Good morning; good morning” the General saidwhen we met last week on our way to the line.Now the soldiers he smiled at are most of ‘em dead,and we’re cursing his staff for incompetent swine.“He’s a cheery old card,” grunted Harry to Jackas they slogged up to Arras with rifle and pack. But he did for them both by his plan of attack. A Poplar and the Moon There stood a Poplar, tall and straight;The fair, round moon, uprisen late,Made the long shadow on the grassA ghostly bridge ‘twixt heaven and me. But May, with slumbrous nights, must pass; And blustering winds will strip the tree.And I’ve no magic to expressThe moment of that loveliness;So from these words you’ll never guessThe stars and lilies I could see. Sporting Acquaintances I watched old squatting Chimpanzee; he tracedHis painful patterns in the dirt: I sawRed-haired Ourang-Utang, whimsical-faced,Chewing a sportsman’s meditative straw.I’d known them years ago, and half-forgottenThey’d come to grief. (But how, I’d never heard,Poor beggars!) Still, it seemed so rude and rottenTo stand and gape at them with never a word. I ventured ‘Ages since we met,’ and triedMy candid smile of friendship. No success.One scratched his hairy thigh, while t’other sighedAnd glanced away. I saw they liked me lessThan when, on Epsom Downs, in cloudless weather,We backed The Tetrarch and got drunk together. Suicide in the Trenches I knew a simple soldier boyWho grinned at life in empty joy,Slept soundly through the lonesome dark,And whistled early with the lark. In winter trenches, cowed and glum,With crumps and lice and lack of rum,He put a bullet through his brain.No one spoke of him again. You smug-faced crowds with kindling eyewho cheer when soldier lads march by,Sneak home and pray you’ll never knowThe hell where youth and laughter go. The Rear-Guard(Hindenburg Line, April 1917) Groping along the tunnel, step by step,He winked his prying torch with patching glareFrom side to side, and sniffed the unwholesome air. Tins, boxes, bottles, shapes too vague to know;A mirror smashed, the mattress from a bed;And he, exploring fifty feet belowThe rosy gloom of battle overhead. Tripping, he grabbed the wall; saw some one lieHumped at his feet, half-hidden by a rug,And stooped to give the sleeper’s arm a tug.‘I’m looking for headquarters.’ No reply.‘God blast your neck!’ (For days he’d had no sleep,)‘Get up and guide me through this stinking place.’ Savage, he kicked a soft, unanswering heap,And flashed his beam across the livid faceTerribly glaring up, whose eyes yet woreAgony dying hard ten days before;And fists of fingers clutched a blackening wound. Alone he staggered on until he foundDawn’s ghost that filtered down a shafted stairTo the dazed, muttering creatures undergroundWho hear the boom of shells in muffled sound.At last, with sweat of horror in his hair,He climbed through darkness to the twilight air,Unloading hell behind him step by step. Absolution The anguish of the earth absolves our eyesTill beauty shines in all that we can see.War is our scourge; yet war has made us wise,And, fighting for our freedom, we are free. Horror of wounds and anger at the foe,And loss of things desired; all these must pass.We are the happy legion, for we knowTime’s but a golden wind that shakes the grass. There was an hour when we were loth to partFrom life we longed to share no less than others.Now, having claimed this heritage of heart,What need we more, my comrades and my brothers? Absolution was written in 1915 - Sassoon said of it: “People used to feel like this when they ‘joined up’ in 1914 and 1915. No one feels it when they ‘go out again’. They only feel, then, a queer craving for ‘good old times at Givenchy’ etc. But there will always be ‘good old times’, even for people promoted from inferno to paradise!” Wraiths They know not the green leaves;In whose earth-haunting dreamDimly the forest heaves,And voiceless goes the stream. Strangely they seek a place In love’s night-memoried hall; Peering from face to face, Until some heart shall call And keep them, for a breath, Half-mortal....(Hark to the rain!)... They are dead....(O hear how death gropes on the shutter’d pane!) Banishment I am banished from the patient men who fightThey smote my heart to pity, built my pride.Shoulder to aching shoulder, side by side,They trudged away from life’s broad wealds of light.Their wrongs were mine, and ever in my sightThey went arrayed in honour. But the died,-Not one by one: and mutinous I criedTo those who sent them out into the night. The darkness tells how vainly I have strivenTo free them from the pit where they must dwellIn outcast gloom convulsed and jagged and rivenBy grappling guns. Love drove me to rebel.Loves drives me back to grope with them through hell;And in their tortured eyes I stand forgiven. Early Chronology Slowly the daylight left our listening faces. Professor Brown with level baritoneDiscoursed into the dusk. Five thousand yearsHe guided us through scientific spacesOf excavated History; till his loneRoads of research grew blurred; and in our earsTime was the rumoured tongues of vanished races,and Thought a chartless Age of Ice and Stone. The story ended: and the darkened airFlowered while he lit his pipe; an aureole glowedUnwreathed with smoke; the moment’s match-light showedHis rosy face, broad brow, and smooth grey hair,Backed by the crowded book-shelves. In his wakeAn archaeologist began to makeAssumptions about aqueducts (he quotedProfessor Sandstorm’s book); and soon they floatedThrough desiccated forests; mangled myths;And argued easily round megaliths. Beyond the college garden something glinted;A copper moon climbed clear above black trees.Some Lydian coin?...Professor Brown agreesThat copper coins were in that culture minted.But, as her whitening way aloft she took,I thought she had a pre-dynastic look The Dug-Out Why do you lie with your legs ungainly huddled,And one arm bent across your sullen, cold,Exhausted face? It hurts my heart to watch you,Deep-shadow’d from the candle’s guttering gold;And you wonder why I shake you by the shoulder;Drowsy, you mumble and sigh and turn your head...You are too young to fall asleep for ever;And when you sleep you remind me of the dead. Everyone Sang Everyone suddenly burst out singing;And I was filled with such delightAs prisoned birds must find in freedom,Winging wildly across the whiteOrchards and dark green fields, on - on - and out of sight. Everyone’s voice was suddenly lifted;And beauty came like the setting sun:My heart was shaken with tears; and horrorDrifted away...O, but everyoneWas a bird; and the song was wordless, the singing will never be done. Grandeur of Ghosts When I have heard Small talk about great menI climb to bed; light my two candles; thenConsider what was said; and put asideWhat such-a-one remarked and someone-else replied. They have spoken lightly of my deathless friends,(Lamps for my gloom, hands guiding where I stumble,)Quoting, for shallow conversational ends,What Shelley shrilled, what Blake once wildly muttered... How can they use such names and be not humble?I have sat silent; angry at what they uttered.The dead bequeathed them life; the dead have saidWhat these can only memorize and mumble. The Power and the Glory Let there be life, said God. And what He wroughtwent past in myriad marching lives, and broughtThis hour, this quiet room, and my small thoughtHolding invisible vastness in its hands. Let there be God, say I. And what I’ve doneGoes onward like the splendour of the sunAnd rises up in rapture and is oneWith the white power of conscience that commands. Let life be God...What wail of fiend or wraithDare mock my glorious angel where he standsTo fill my dark with fire, my heart with faith? Song-Books of the War In fifty years, when peace outshinesRemembrance of the battle lines,Adventurous lads will sigh and castProud looks upon the plundered past.On summer morn or winter’s night,Their hearts will kindle for the fight,Reading a snatch of soldier-song,Savage and jaunty, fierce and strong;And through the angry marching rhymesOf blind regret and haggard mirth,They’ll envy us the dazzling timesWhen sacrifice absolved our earth. Some ancient man with silver locksWill lift his weary face to say:‘War was a fiend who stopped our clocksAlthough we met him grim and gay.’And then he’ll speak of Haig’s last drive,Marvelling that any came aliveOut of the shambles that men builtAnd smashed, to cleanse the world of guilt.But the boys, with grin and sidelong glance,Will think, ‘Poor grandad’s day is done.’And dream of lads who fought in FranceAnd lived in time to share the fun. A Last Judgment He heard an angel say now look for love, and lookFor lust the burning city of his heart replied.And the angel, whom his heart had life-time-long denied,In silence stood apart and watched him while he tookThe scarlet and the sceptre and the crown of pride,-Calling for the masquerade and music of his minions,-Calling for the loves whose murdered eyes had left him wiseWith phantasies of flesh in wind-bewailed dominions. Their tongues were guttering lights, their songs were sated revels;Their mimicries that sank to whispers and withdrewWere couriers of corruption. Mocked and maimed he knew,For scrawls on dungeon walls his priapismic devils. He woke; the sceptre broke; and cast away the crown;Fought blindly with the strangling of the scarlet gown;Cried out on hell and heaven, and saw the burning-brightAngel with eyes inexorable and wings, once whiteFor mercy, now by storming judgment backward blown;Saw absolution changed to unrelenting stone;Shrieked; and aghast his ghost from flesh was whirled awayOn roaring gales of gloom...He heard an angel say... Wisdom When wisdom tells me that the world’s a speckLost on the shoreless blue of God’s to-day...I smile, and think, ‘For every man his way:The world’s my ship, and I’m alone on deck!’ And when he tells me that the world’s a sparkLit in the whistling gloom of God’s To-Night...I look within me to the edge of dark,And dream, ‘The world’s my field, and I’m the lark,Alone with upward song, alone with light!’ Together Splashing along the boggy woods all day,And over brambled hedge and holding clay,I shall not think of him:But when the watery fields grow brown and dim,And hounds have lost their fox, and horses tire,I know that he’ll be with me on my wayHome through the darkness to the evening fire. He’s jumped each stile along the glistening lanes;His hand will be upon the mud-soaked reins;Hearing the saddle creak,He’ll wonder if the frost will come next week.I shall forget him in the morning light;And while we gallop on he will not speak:But at the stable-door he’ll say good-night. A Midnight Interior To-night while I was pondering in my chairI saw for the first time a circle of brightnessMade by my patient lamp up on the ceiling.It shone like a strange flower; and then my stare Discovered an arctic snowstorm in that whiteness;And then some pastoral vale of rayed revealing. White flowers were in a bowl beside my book;In midnight’s miracle of light they glowed,And every petal there in silence showedMy life the way to wonder with a look. O inwardness of trust,- intelligence,-Release my soul through every door of sense:Give me new sight; O grant me strength to findFrom lamp and flower simplicity of mind. SONG (I Listen For Him) I listen for him through the rain,And in the dusk of starless hoursI know he will return again;Loth was he ever to forsake me.He comes with glimmering of flowersAnd stir of music to awake me. Spirit of purity he standsAs once he lived, in charm and grace;I may not hold him with these hands,Nor bid him stay to heal my sorrow:Only his fair unshadowed faceAbides with me until to-morrow. Everyman The weariness of life that has no willTo climb the steepening hill:The sickness of the soul for sleep, and to be still.And then once more the impassioned pigmy fistClenched cloudward and defiant;The pride that would prevail, the doomed protagonistGrappling the ghostly giant.Victim and venturer by turn, and thenSet free to be againCompanion in repose with those who once were men. The mind of man environing its thought,Wherein a world within this world is wrought,- A shadowed face alone in fields of light.The lowly growth and long endeavour of willThat waits and watches from its human hill, A landmark tree looming against the night. World undiscovered within us, radiant-white,Through miracles of sight unmastered still,Grant us the power to follow and to fulfill. The Death-Bed He drowsed and was aware of silence heapedRound him, unshaken as the steadfast walls;Aqueous like floating rays of amber light,Soaring and quivering in the wings of sleep.Silence and safety; and his mortal shoreLipped by the inward, moonless waves of death. someone was holding water to his mouth.He swallowed, unresisting; moaned and droppedThrough crimson gloom to darkness; and forgotThe opiate throb and ache that was his wound. Water - calm, sliding green above the weir. Water - a sky-lit alley for his boat, Bird-voiced, and bordered with reflected flowers And shaken hues of summer; drifting down, He dipped contented oars, and sighed, and slept. Night, with a gust of wind, was in the ward,Blowing the curtain to a glimmering curve.Night. He was blind; he could not see the starsGlinting among the wraiths of wandering cloud;Queer blots of colour, purple, scarlet, green,Flickered and faded in his drowning eyes. Rain - he could hear it rustling through the dark;Fragrance and passionless music woven as one;Warm rain on drooping roses; pattering showersThat soak the woods; not the harsh rain that sweepsbehind the thunder, but a trickling peace,Gently and slowly washing life away. He stirred, shifting his body; then the painLeapt like a prowling beast, and gripped and toreHis groping dreams with grinding claws and fangs. But someone was beside him; soon he lay Shuddering because that evil thing had passed. And death, who’d stepped toward him, paused and stared. Light many lamps and gather round his bed.Lend him your eyes, warm blood, and will to live.Speak to him; rouse him; you may save him yet.He’s young; he hated war; how should he dieWhen cruel old campaigners win safe through? But death replied: ‘I choose him.’ So he went,and there was silence in the summer night;Silence and safety; and the veils of sleep.Then, far away, the thudding of the guns. Base Details If I were fierce, and bald, and short of breath, I’d live with scarlet Majors at the base,And speed glum heroes up the line to death. You’d see me with my puffy petulant face,Guzzling and gulping in the best hotel, Reading the Roll of Honour. ‘Poor young chap,’I’d say - ‘I used to know his father well; Yes, we’ve lost heavily in this scrap.’And when the war is done and youth stone dead,I’d toddle safely home and die - in bed. A Flower Has Opened in my Heart A flower has opened in my heart...What flower is this, what flower of spring,What simple, secret thing?It is the peace that shines apart,The peace of daybreak skies that bringClear song and wild swift wing. Heart’s miracle of inward light,What powers unknown have sown your seedAnd your perfection freed?...O flower within me wondrous white,I know you only as my needAnd my unsealed sight. Sing Bravely Sing bravely in my heart, you patient birdsWho all this weary winter wait for spring;Sing, till such wonder wakens in my wordsAs I have known long since, beyond all voicing,-Strong with the beat of blood, wild on the wing,Rebellious and rejoicing. Watch with me, inward solemn influence,Invisible, intangible, unkenned;Wind of the darkness that shall bear me hence;O life within my life, flame within flame,Who mak’st me one with song that has no end,And with that stillness whence my spirit came. A Premonition A gas-proof ghost, I climbed the stairTo find how priceless paintings fareWhen corpses, chemically killed,Lie hunched and twisted in the stilledDisaster of Trafalgar Square. To time’s eternities I came;And found the Virgin of the rocksDreaming with downward eyes the sameApocalypse of peace... The claimOf Art was disallowed. Past locksAnd walls crass war had groped, and gasWas tarnishing each gilded frame. Asking For It Lord God whose mercy guards the virgin jungle;Lord God whose fields with dragon’s teeth are farmed;Lord God of blockheads, bombing-planes, and bungle,Assist us to be adequately armed. Lord God of cruelties incomprehensibleAnd randomized damnations indefensible,Perfect in us thy tyrannous techniqueFor torturing the innocent and weak. God of the dear old Mastodon’s morassesWhose love pervaded pre-diluvial mud,Grant us the power to prove, by poison gases,The needlessness of shedding human blood. Ex-Service Derision from the deadMocks armamental madness.Redeem (each Ruler said)Mankind. Men died to do it.And some with glorying gladnessBore arms for earth and bled:But most went glumly through itDumbly doomed to rue it. The darkness of their dyingGrows one with war recorded;Whose swindled ghosts are cryingFrom shell-holes in the past,Our deeds with lies are lauded,Our bones with wrongs rewarded.Dream voices these - denyingDud laurels to the last. Metamorphosis Sandys sat translating Ovid. Both his handsWere busy. Busy with his curious mind.Each note he wrote was news from fabled lands.He hob-nobbed with Pythagoras, calm and kind.In a quaint narrow age, remote from this,Sat Sandys translating Metamorphosis. The scholarship is obsolete, and the versePedestrian perhaps. Yet, while I turnHis friendly folio pages (none the worseFor emblematic worm-holes) I discernNot nature preying on itself, but TimeRevealed by rich humanity in rhyme. Morning Express Along the wind-swept platform, pinched and white,the travellers stand in pools of wintry light,Offering themselves to morn’s long, slanting arrows.The train’s due; porters trundle laden barrows.The train steams in, volleying resplendent cloudsOf sun-blown vapour. Hither and about,Scared people hurry, storming the doors in crowds.The officials seem to waken with a shout,Resolved to hoist and plunder; some to the vansLeap; others rumble the milk in gleaming cans. Boys, indolent-eyed, from baskets leaning back,Question each face; a man with a hammer stealsStooping from coach to coach; with clang and clack,Touches and tests, and listens to the wheels.Guard sounds a warning whistle, points to the clockWith brandished flag, and on his folded flockClaps the last door; the monster grunts: “Enough!”Tightening his load of links with pant and puff.Under the arch, then forth into blue day,Glide the processional windows on their way,And glimpse the stately folk who sit at easeTo view the world like kings taking the seasIn prosperous weather: drifting banners tellTheir progress to the counties; with them goesThe clamour of their journeying: while thoseWho sped them stand to wave a last farewell. Attack At dawn the ridge emerges massed and dunIn the wild purple of the glow’ring sun,Smouldering through spouts of drifting smoke that shroudThe menacing scarred slope; and, one by one,Tanks creep and topple forward to the wire.The barrage roars and lifts. Then, clumsily bowedWith bombs and guns and shovels and battle-gear,Men jostle and climb to meet the bristling fire.Lines of grey, muttering faces, masked with fear,They leave their trenches, going over the top,While time ticks blank and busy on their wrists,And hope, with furtive eyes and grappling fists,Flounders in the mud. O Jesus, make it stop! The Merciful Knight Swift, in a moment’s thought, our lastingness is wroughtFrom life, the transient wing.Swift, in a moment’s light, he mercy found, that knightWho rode alone in spring...The knight who sleeps in stone with ivy overgrownKnew this miraculous thing.In a moment of the years the sun, like love through tears,Shone where rain went by.In a world where armoured men made swords their strength and thenRode darkly out to die,One heart was there estranged; one heart, one heart was changedWhile the cloud crossed the sun...Mercy from long ago, be mine that I may knowLife’s lastingness begun. Brevities I am that man who with a luminous lookSits up at night to write a ruminant book. I am that man who with a furrowing frownThinks harshly of the world - and corks it down. I am that man who loves to ride aloneWhen landscapes wear his mind’s autumnal tone. I am that man who, having lived this day,Looks once on life and goes his wordless way. On Scratchbury Camp Along the grave green downs, this idle afternoon,Shadows of loitering silver clouds, becalmed in blue,Bring, like unfoldment of a flower, the best of June. Shadows outspread in spacious movement, always youHave dappled the downs and valleys at this time of year,While larks, ascending shrill, praised freedom as they flew.Now, through that song, a fighter-squadron’s drone I hearFrom Scratchbury Camp, whose turfed and cowslip’d rampart seemsMore hill than history, ageless and oblivion-blurred. I walk the fosse, once manned by bronze and flint-head spear,On war’s imperious wing the shafted sun-ray gleams:One with the warm sweet air of summer stoops the bird. Cloud shadows, drifting slow like heedless daylight dreams,Dwell and dissolve; uncircumstanced they pause and pass.I watch them go. My horse, contented, crops the grass. At the Grave of Henry Vaughan Above the voiceful windings of a riverAn old green slab of simply graven stoneShuns notice, overshadowed by a yew.Here Vaughan lies dead, whose name flows on for everThrough pastures of the spirit washed with dewAnd starlit with eternities unknown. Here sleeps the Silurist; the loved physician;The face that left no portraiture behind;The skull that housed white angels and had visionOf daybreak through the gateways of the mind. Here faith and mercy, wisdom and humility (Whose influence shall prevail for evermore) Shine. And this lowly grave tells Heaven’s tranquility. And here stand I, a suppliant at the door. The Blues at Lords Near-neighboured by a blandly boisterous DeanWho “hasn’t missed the match since ‘92,”Proposing to perpetuate the sceneI concentrate my eyesight on the cricket.The game proceeds, as it is bound to doTill tea-time or the fall of the next wicket. Agreeable sunshine fosters greensward greenerThan college lawns in June. Tradition-true,The stalwart teams, capped with contrasted blue,Exert their skill; adorning the arenaWith modest, manly, muscular demeanour,-Reviving memories in ex-athletes whoAre superannuated from agility-And (while the five-ounce fetish they pursue)Admired by gloved and virginal gentility. My intellectual feet approach this functionWith tolerance and Public-School compunction;Aware that, whichsoever side bats best,Their partisans are equally well-dressed.For, though the Government has gone vermillionAnd, as a whole, is weak in Greek and Latin,The fogies harboured by the august PavilionSit strangely similar to those who sat inThe edifice when first the Dean went pious,-For possible preferment sacrificedHis hedonistic and patrician bias,And offered his complacency to Christ. Meanwhile some Cantab slogs a fast half-volleyAgainst the ropes. “Good shot sir! O good shot!”Ejaculates the Dean in accents jolly...Will Oxford win? Perhaps. Perhaps they’ll not.Can Cambridge lose? Who knows? One fact seems sure;That, while the church approves, Lord’s will endure. The Extra Inch O BATSMAN, rise and go and stop the rot,And go and stop the rot.(It was indeed a rot,Six down for twenty-three).The batsman thought how wretched was his lot,And all alone went he. The bowler bared his mighty, cunning arm,His vengeance-wreaking arm,His large yet wily arm,With fearful powers endowed.The batsman took his guard. (A deadly calmHad fallen on the crowd). O is it half-volley or long-hop,A seventh-bounce long-hop,A fast and fierce long-hop,That the bowler letteth fly?The ball was straight and bowled him neck and crop.He knew not how nor why. Full sad and slow pavilionwards he walked.The careless critics talked;Some said that he was yorked;A half-volley at a pinch.The batsman murmured as he inward stalked,“It was the extra inch.” Because the Duke is Duke of York Because the Duke is Duke of York,The Duke of York has shot a huge rhinoceros;Let’s hope the Prince of Wales will take a walkThrough Africa, and make the Empire talkBy shooting an enormous hippopotamus,And let us also hope that Lord LascellesWill shoot all beasts from gryphons to gazellesAnd show the world what sterling stuff we’ve got in us. Memorial Tablet Squire nagged and bullied till I went to fight,(Under Lord Derby’s Scheme). I died in hell - (They called it Passchendaele). My wound was slight,And I was hobbling back; and then a shellBurst slick upon the duck-boards: so I fellInto the bottomless mud, and lost the light. At sermon-time, while Squire is in his pew,He gives my gilded name a thoughtful stare;For, though low down upon the list, I’m there;‘In proud and glorious memory’...that’s my due.Two bleeding years I fought in France, for Squire:I suffered anguish that he’s never guessed.Once I came home on leave: and then went west...What greater glory could a man desire? Neighbours I pictured someone sharpening at a flintNear where I live, antiquities ago:Of me he held no neolithic hint;And what tomorrow meant he could not know. Conjecturing creatures comparable in changeFrom him to me, futurities ahead,I thought how prehistorically strangeI should become, distanced among the dead. The Deceiver I saw that smiling conjuror Success -An impresario in full evening dress -Advancing toward me from some floodlit placeWhere fame resides. I did not like his face. I did not like this too forthcoming chapWhose programme was to ‘put me on the map.’Therefore I left his blandishment unheeded,And told him I was not the man he needed. When I’m Alone ‘WHEN I’m alone’ - the words tripped off his tongueAs though to be alone were nothing strange.When I was young’, he said; ‘when I was young...’ I thought of age, and loneliness, and change.I thought how strange we grow when we’re alone,And how unlike the selves that meet, and talk,And blow the candles out, and say good-night.Alone... The word is life endured and known.It is the stillness where our spirits walkAnd all but inmost faith is overthrown. Concert Interpretation(Le Sacre du Printemps) The Audience pricks an intellectual Ear...Stravinsky... Quite the Concert of the Year! Forgetting now that none so distant dateWhen they (of folk facsimilar in stateOf mind) first heard with hisses - hoots - guffawsThis abstract Symphony; (they booed becauseStravinsky jumped their Wagner palisadeWith modes that seemed cacophonous and queer;)Forgetting now the hullabaloo they made,The Audience pricks an intellectual Ear. Bassoons begin... Sonority envelopsOur auditory innocence; and bringsTo me, I must admit, some drift of thingsOmnific, seminal, and adolescent.Polyphone through dissonance developsA serpent-conscious Eden, crude but pleasant;While vibro-atmospheric copulationsWith mezzo-forte mysteries of noisePrelude Stravinsky’s statement of the joysThat unify the monkeydom of nations. This matter is most indelicate indeed!Yet one perceives no symptom of stampede.The stalls remain unruffled: craniums gleamSwept by a storm of pizzicato chords:Elaborate ladies reassure their lordsWith lifting brows that signify ‘Supreme’While orchestrated gallantry of goatsImpugns the astigmatic programme-notes. In the Grand Circle one observes no signOf riot: peace prevails along the line.And in the Gallery, cargoed to capacityNo tremor bodes eruptions and alarms.They are listening to this not-quite-new audacityAs though it were by someone dead, - like Brahms. But savagery pervades Me; I am franticWith corybantic rupturing of laws.Come dance, and seize this clamorous chance to functionCreatively - abandoning compunctionIn anti-social rhapsodic applause!Lynch the conductor! Jugulate the drums!Butch the brass! Ensanguinate the strings!Throttle the flutes!... Stravinsky’s April comesWith pitiless pomp and pain of sacred springs...Incendiarize the Hall with resinous firesOf sacrificial fiddles scorched and snapping...Meanwhile the music blazes and expires;And the delighted Audience is clapping. Counter-Attack We’d gained our first objective hours beforeWhile dawn broke like a face with blinking eyes,Pallid, unshaven and thirsty, blind with smoke.Things seemed all right at first. We held their line,With bombers posted, Lewis guns well placed,And clink of shovels deepening the shallow trench. The place was rotten with dead; green clumsy legs High-booted, sprawled and grovelled along the saps And trunks, face downward, in the sucking mud, Wallowed like trodden sand-bags loosely filled; And naked sodden buttocks, mats of hair, Bulged, clotted heads slept in the plastering slime. And then the rain began, - the jolly old rain! A yawning soldier knelt against the bank,Staring across the morning blear with fog;He wondered when the Allemands would get busy;And then, of course, they started with five-ninesTraversing, sure as fate, and never a dud.Mute in the clamour of shells he watched them burstSpouting dark earth and wire with gusts from hell,While posturing giants dissolved in drifts of smoke.He crouched and flinched, dizzy with galloping fear,Sick for escape, - loathing the strangled horrorAnd butchered, frantic gestures of the dead. An officer came blundering down the trench:‘Stand-to and man the fire step!’ On he went...Gasping and bawling, ‘Fire-step... counter-attack!’ Then the haze lifted. Bombing on the right Down the old sap: machine-guns on the left; And stumbling figures looming out in front. ‘O Christ, they’re coming at us!’ Bullets spat,And he remembered his rifle... rapid fire...And started blazing wildly... then a bangCrumpled and spun him sideways, knocked him outTo grunt and wriggle: none heeded him; he chokedAnd fought the flapping veils of smothering gloom,Lost in a blurred confusion of yells and groans...Down, and down, and down, he sank and drowned,Bleeding to death. The counter-attack had failed. To Any Dead Officer Well, how are things in Heaven? I wish you’d say, Because I’d like to know that you’re all right.Tell me, have you found everlasting day, Or been sucked in by everlasting night?For when I shut my eyes your face shows plain; I hear you make some cheery old remark -I can rebuild you in my brain, Though you’ve gone out patrolling in the dark. You hated tours of trenches; you were proud Of nothing more than having good years to spend;Longed to get home and join the careless crowd Of chaps who work in peace with Time for friend.That’s all washed out now. You’re beyond the wire: No earthly chance can send you crawling back;You’ve finished with machine-gun fire - Knocked over in a hopeless dud-attack. Somehow I always thought you’d get done in, Because you were so desperate keen to live:you were all out to try and save your skin, Well knowing how much the world had got to give.You joked at shells and talked the usual ‘shop,’ Stuck to your dirty job and did it fine:With ‘Jesus Christ! when will it stop? Three years... It’s hell unless we break their line.’ So when they told me you’d been left for dead I wouldn’t believe them, feeling it must be true.Next week the bloody Roll of Honour said ‘Wounded and missing’ - (That’s the thing to doWhen lads are left in shell-holes dying slow, With nothing but blank sky and wounds that ache,Moaning for water till they know It’s night, and then it’s not worth while to wake!) Good-bye, old lad! Remember me to God, And tell Him that our politicians swearThey won’t give in till Prussian Rule’s been trod Under the Heel of England... Are you there?...Yes... and the war won’t end for at least two years;But we’ve got stacks of men... I’m blind with tears, Staring into the dark. Cheero!I wish they’d killed you in a decent show. The Heaven of our Hearts(To H.R.L.S.) Heaven is a state of which we are not sure.Beyond this world I dare not hope to endure;But in my heart and my time-journeying headThere’s heaven on earth for friends beloved and dead. You, and your work for Christ, for whom you died,In long remembrance live beatified.And your brave soul, which saw the seraphim,In hosts of heart-won heavens will speak for him. The Old Huntsman[To Norman Loder]
I’ve never ceased to curse the day I signed A seven years’ bargain for the Golden Fleece. ’Twas a bad deal all round; and dear enough It cost me, what with my daft management, And the mean folk as owed and never paid me, And backing losers; and the local bucks Egging me on with whiskeys while I bragged The man I was when huntsman to the Squire.
I’d have been prosperous if I’d took a farm Of fifty acres, drove my gig and haggled At Monday markets; now I’ve squandered all My savings; nigh three hundred pound I got As testimonial when I’d grown too stiff And slow to press a beaten fox.
The Fleece! ’Twas the damned Fleece that wore my Emily out, The wife of thirty years who served me well; (Not like this bedlam clattering in the kitchen, That never trims a lamp nor sweeps the floor, And brings me greasy soup in a foul crock.)
Blast the old harridan! What’s fetched her now, Leaving me in the dark, and short of fire? And where’s my pipe? ’Tis lucky I’ve a turn For thinking, and remembering all that’s past. And now’s my hour, before I hobble to bed, To set the works a-wheezing, wind the clock That keeps the time of life with feeble tick Behind my bleared old face that stares and wonders.
It’s queer how, in the dark, comes back to mind Some morning of September. We’ve been digging In a steep sandy warren, riddled with holes, And I’ve just pulled the terrier out and left A sharp-nosed cub-face blinking there and snapping, Then in a moment seen him mobbed and torn To strips in the baying hurly of the pack. I picture it so clear: the dusty sunshine On bracken, and the men with spades, that wipe Red faces: one tilts up a mug of ale. And, having stopped to clean my gory hands, I whistle the jostling beauties out of the wood.
I’m but a daft old fool! I often wish The Squire were back again—ah! he was a man! They don’t breed men like him these days; he’d come For sure, and sit and talk and suck his briar Till the old wife brings up a dish of tea.
Ay, those were days, when I was serving Squire! I never knowed such sport as ’85, The winter afore the one that snowed us silly.
Once in a way the parson will drop in And read a bit o’ the Bible, if I’m bad, And pray the Lord to make my spirit whole In faith: he leaves some ’baccy on the shelf, And wonders I don’t keep a dog to cheer me Because he knows I’m mortal fond of dogs!
I ask you, what’s a gent like that to me As wouldn’t know Elijah if I saw him, Nor have the wit to keep him on the talk? ’Tis kind of parson to be troubling still With such as me; but he’s a town-bred chap, Full of his college notions and Christmas hymns.
Religion beats me. I’m amazed at folk Drinking the gospels in and never scratching Their heads for questions. When I was a lad I learned a bit from mother, and never thought To educate myself for prayers and psalms.
But now I’m old and bald and serious-minded, With days to sit and ponder. I’d no chance When young and gay to get the hang of all This Hell and Heaven: and when the clergy hoick And holloa from their pulpits, I’m asleep, However hard I listen; and when they pray It seems we’re all like children sucking sweets In school, and wondering whether master sees.
I used to dream of Hell when I was first Promoted to a huntsman’s job, and scent Was rotten, and all the foxes disappeared, And hounds were short of blood; and officers From barracks over-rode ’em all day long On weedy, whistling nags that knocked a hole In every fence; good sportsmen to a man And brigadiers by now, but dreadful hard On a young huntsman keen to show some sport.
Ay, Hell was thick with captains, and I rode The lumbering brute that’s beat in half a mile, And blunders into every blind old ditch. Hell was the coldest scenting land I’ve known, And both my whips were always lost, and hounds Would never get their heads down; and a man On a great yawing chestnut trying to cast ’em While I was in a corner pounded by The ugliest hog-backed stile you’ve clapped your eyes on. There was an iron-spiked fence round all the coverts, And civil-spoken keepers I couldn’t trust, And the main earth unstopp’d. The fox I found Was always a three-legged ’un from a bag, Who reeked of aniseed and wouldn’t run. The farmers were all ploughing their old pasture And bellowing at me when I rode their beans To cast for beaten fox, or galloped on With hounds to a lucky view. I’d lost my voice Although I shouted fit to burst my guts, And couldn’t blow my horn.
And when I woke, Emily snored, and barn-cocks started crowing, And morn was at the window; and I was glad To be alive because I heard the cry Of hounds like church-bells chiming on a Sunday. Ay, that’s the song I’d wish to hear in Heaven! The cry of hounds was Heaven for me: I know Parson would call me crazed and wrong to say it, But where’s the use of life and being glad If God’s not in your gladness?
I’ve no brains For book-learned studies; but I’ve heard men say There’s much in print that clergy have to wink at: Though many I’ve met were jolly chaps, and rode To hounds, and walked me puppies; and could pick Good legs and loins and necks and shoulders, ay, And feet—’twas necks and feet I looked at first.
Some hounds I’ve known were wise as half your saints, And better hunters. That old dog of the Duke’s, Harlequin; what a dog he was to draw! And what a note he had, and what a nose When foxes ran down wind and scent was catchy! And that light lemon bitch of the Squire’s, old Dorcas— She were a marvellous hunter, were old Dorcas! Ay, oft I’ve thought, ‘If there were hounds in Heaven, With God as master, taking no subscription; And all His blessèd country farmed by tenants, And a straight-necked old fox in every gorse!’ But when I came to work it out, I found There’d be too many huntsmen wanting places, Though some I’ve known might get a job with Nick!
I’ve come to think of God as something like The figure of a man the old Duke was When I was turning hounds to Nimrod King, Before his Grace was took so bad with gout And had to quit the saddle. Tall and spare, Clean-shaved and grey, with shrewd, kind eyes, that twinkled, And easy walk; who, when he gave good words, Gave them whole-hearted; and would never blame Without just cause. Lord God might be like that, Sitting alone in a great room of books Some evening after hunting.
Now I’m tired With hearkening to the tick-tack on the shelf; And pondering makes me doubtful.
Riding home On a moonless night of cloud that feels like frost Though stars are hidden (hold your feet up, horse!) And thinking what a task I had to draw A pack with all those lame ’uns, and the lot Wanting a rest from all this open weather; That’s what I’m doing now.
And likely, too, The frost’ll be a long ’un, and the night One sleep. The parsons say we’ll wake to find A country blinding-white with dazzle of snow.
The naked stars make men feel lonely, wheeling And glinting on the puddles in the road.
And then you listen to the wind, and wonder If folk are quite such bucks as they appear When dressed by London tailors, looking down Their boots at covert side, and thinking big.
This world’s a funny place to live in. Soon I’ll need to change my country; but I know ’Tis little enough I’ve understood my life, And a power of sights I’ve missed, and foreign marvels.
I used to feel it, riding on spring days In meadows pied with sun and chasing clouds, And half forget how I was there to catch The foxes; lose the angry, eager feeling A huntsman ought to have, that’s out for blood, And means his hounds to get it!
Now I know It’s God that speaks to us when we’re bewitched, Smelling the hay in June and smiling quiet; Or when there’s been a spell of summer drought, Lying awake and listening to the rain.
I’d like to be the simpleton I was In the old days when I was whipping-in To a little harrier-pack in Worcestershire, And loved a dairymaid, but never knew it Until she’d wed another. So I’ve loved My life; and when the good years are gone down, Discover what I’ve lost.
I never broke Out of my blundering self into the world, But let it all go past me, like a man Half asleep in a land that’s full of wars.
What a grand thing ’twould be if I could go Back to the kennels now and take my hounds For summer exercise; be riding out With forty couple when the quiet skies Are streaked with sunrise, and the silly birds Grown hoarse with singing; cobwebs on the furze Up on the hill, and all the country strange, With no one stirring; and the horses fresh, Sniffing the air I’ll never breathe again.
You’ve brought the lamp, then, Martha? I’ve no mind For newspaper to-night, nor bread and cheese. Give me the candle, and I’ll get to bed.
On Passing the New Menin Gate
Who will remember, passing through this gate,The unheroic dead who fed the guns?Who shall absolve the foulness of their fate,-Those doomed, conscripted, unvictorious ones? Crudely renewed, the Salient holds its own. Paid are its dim defenders by this pomp; Paid, with a pile of peace-complacent stone, The armies who endured that sullen swamp. Here was the world’s worst wound. And here with pride‘Their name liveth ever,’ the Gateway claims.Was ever an immolation so beliedAs these intolerably nameless names?Well might the dead who struggled in the slimeRise and deride this sepulchre of crime. Prelude: The Troops Dim, gradual thinning of the shapeless gloomShudders to drizzling daybreak that revealsDisconsolate men who stamp their sodden bootsAnd turn dulled, sunken faces to the skyHaggard and hopeless. They, who have beaten downThe stale despair of night, must now renewTheir desolation in the truce of dawn,Murdering the livid hours that grope for peace. Yet these, who cling to life with stubborn hands,Can grin through storms of death and find a gapIn the clawed, cruel tangles of his defence.They march from safety, and the bird-sung joyOf grass-green thickets, to the land where allIs ruin, and nothing blossoms but the skyThat hastens over them where they endureSad, smoking, flat horizons, reeking woods,And foundered trench-lines volleying doom for doom. On my brave brown companions, when your soulsFlock silently away, and the eyeless deadShame the wild beast of battle on the ridge,Death will stand grieving in that field of warSince your unvanquished hardihood is spent.And through some mooned Valhalla there will passBattalions and battalions, scarred from hell;The unreturning army that was youth;The legions who have suffered and are dust. They The Bishop tells us: “When the boys come backThey will not be the same; for they’ll have foughtIn a just cause: they lead the last attackOn Anti-Christ; their comrade’s blood has boughtNew right to breed an honourable race,They have challenged Death and dared him face to face.”“We’re none of us the same!” the boys reply,“For George lost both his legs; and Bill’s stone blind;Poor Jim’s shot through the lungs and like to die;And Bert’s gone syphilitic; and you’ll not findA chaps who’s served that hasn’t found some change.”And the Bishop said: “The ways of God are strange!” |