*^0^ 0^ ^^0^ 'vt, •0^ .0* O '-^^0^ '*'=:. ^ BALLADS OF BATTLE LA CROIX ROUGE Again I see Him hanged on a tree. And crucified afresh ! BALLADS OF BATTLE BY LANCE-CORPORAL JOSEPH LEE IST/4TH BATTALION BLACK WATCH WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY THE AUTHOR NEW YORK E. P. BUTTON AND COMPANY 1916 WILLIAM BUENUON AND SON, LIMIIEU, PRINTERS ILYMOUTH, E>4GLAND TO MY COMRADES IN ARMS CONTENTS Proem ..... The Half-hour's Furlough . Macfarlane's Dug-out Freimdun Dhu : The Black Watch My Rifle : Some Maxims of Sergeant Callary .... The Dead Man The Penitent .... The Bullet .... The Green Grass Stand-to ! . . . . At the Dawn: A Drama of the Trenches The Drum .... Soldier, Soldier " I Canna See the Sergeant " " When We Remembered " The Home-Coming The Mirror The Bayonet .... " Stay-at-Home Hearts are Best " — Not 'Alf .... Invocation : Night in the Trenches La Croix Rouge: A Wayside Calvary in Flanders .... " When the Armada Sailed from Spain The Billet .... vi PAGE X I 5 12 i6 i8 21 22 25 26 33 35 38 40 44 46 48 50 53 54 57 59 CONTENTS vu Nocturnals: Tommy's Night Thoughts in THE Trenches . . . .66 The Combat . . . . -69 The Mouth-Organ . . . -72 The Mother . . . ^ . -77 Tommy and Fritz . . . .78 The Broken Heart . . . . 8i Big Guns . . . . .82 Piou-Piou . . . . .84 Marching , . . . .86 Pick and Spade . . . .88 Sheath not the Sword . . .91 Carrying-Party . . . '93 Song of True Lovers . . -95 1815-1915 : One Hundred Years Ago To- day . . . . .97 Requiem ..... loi LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS La Croix Rouge . • Frontispiece Corporal, 69TH Punjabis page ix Macfarlane in his Dug-out . 7 Sergeant J. Callary 13 Dawn in the Trenches after Neuve Chapelle 27 HiRA Singh 30 "By Black Hearths in the Broken Farm" 41 Broken Trees at Ericht Redoubt 43 Typical Barn Billet . 47 Corporal, Gurkha Regiment . 52 The Old French Farm 58 Interior of the Barn . 61 A Ghost Story at the Front 65 SuBiDAR Major Jocundar Singh, 69T H Pun- JABIS . . . . . 83 PlOU-PlOU . . . . . 85 Hollow Tree Bivouac . 87 "Somewhere in France" 102 CORPORAL, 69TH PUNJABIS / writ these songs in a dead 7nan's book ; I stole the strain from a dead vian's look ; And if mnch of death there may seem to be ' Tis because the dead are so dear to 7ne. THE HALF-HOUR'S FURLOUGH I THOUGHT that a man went home last night From the trench where the tired men he, And walked through the streets of his own old town — And I thought that the man was L And I walked through the gates of that good old town Which circles below the hill, And laves its feet in the river fair That floweth so full and still. Gladly and gladly into my heart Came the old street sounds and sights. And pleasanter far than the Pleiades Was the gleam of the old street lights. / 2 BALLADS OF BATTLE And as I came by St. Mary's Tower, J The old, solemn bell struck ten, And back to me echoed the memory Of my boyhood days again : Musing I turned me East about To the haunt of my fellow-men. There were some that walked, and some that talked. Beneath the old Arcade, And for comfort I elbowed among the throng And hearkened to what they said. Some were that talked, and some that walked By one, by two, by three ; And some there were who spake my name As though they loved me. And some who said, " Might he but return When this weary war is spent ! " And it moved me much that their thought was such. And I turned me well content. A.. ^,^.IIIU \l ' J.,.U-.4jJ THE HALF-HOUR'S FURLOUGH 3 I passed me along each familiar way, And paused at each friendly door, And thought of the things that had chanced within In the kindly days of yore. Till I came to the place of my long, long love, Where she lay with her head on her arm ; And she sighed a prayer that the dear Lord should Shield my body from all harm. Ae kiss I left on her snow-white brow, And ane on her raven hair. And ane, the last, on her ruby lips. Syne forth again I fare. And I came to the home that will aye be home. And brightly the fires did burn. And at hearth, and in hearts, was a place for me 'Gainst the day that I should return. 4 BALLADS OF BATTLE Then I came to the glade where my mother was laid, 'Neath the cypress and the yew : And she stood abune, and she said, " My son, I am glad that your heart was true." And I passed me over both hill and down, By each well-remembered path, While the blessed dawn, like the love o' God, Stole over the sleeping Strath. And from a thorn came the pipe of a thrush. Like the first faint pipes of Peace : It slid with healing into my heart, And my sorrowing found surcease. Then I awoke to the sound of guns, And in my ears was the cry : " The Second Relief will stand to arms ! " And I rose — for that man was L MACFARLANE'S DUG-OUT " This is the house that Mac built." Since the breed that were our forebears first crouched within a cave, And found their food and fought their foe with arrow and with stave, And the things that really mattered unto men were four, or three : Shelter, and sustenance ; a maid ; the simple right to be ; And Fear stalked through the forest and slid adown the glade — There's been nothing like the dug-out that Macfarlane made ! When Mac first designed his dug-out, and commenced his claim to peg, He thought of something spacious in which one might stretch a leg, 5 6 BALLADS OF BATTLE Might lie out at one's leisure, and sit up at one's ease, And not be butted in the back by t'other fellow's knees ; Of such a goodly fashion were the plans the builder laid. And even so the dug-out that Macfarlane made. He shored it up with timber, and he roofed it in with tin Torn from the battered boxes that they bring the biscuits in — (He even used the biscuits, but he begs I should not state The number that he took for tiles, the number that he ate !) — He shaped it, and secured it to withstand the tempest's shocks — (I know he stopped one crevice with the latest gift of socks !) — He trimmed it with his trenching-tool, and slapped it with his spade — A marvel was the dug-out that Macfarlane made. 8 BALLADS OF BATTLE He lined the walls with sand-bags, and he laid the floor with wood, And when his eye beheld it, he beheld it very good ; A broken bayonet in a chink to hold the candle-light ; A waterproof before the door to keep all weather-tight ; A httle shelf for bully, butter, bread, and marmalade — Then finished was the dug-out that Mac- farlane made. Except the Lord do build the house there is no good or gain ; Except the Lord keeps ward with us the watchman wakes in vain : So when we'd passed the threshold, and partaken of Mac's tea, And chalked upon the Hntel, '* At the Back o' Bennachie," Perchance a prayer soared skyward, although no word was said — At least, God blessed the dug-out that Macfarlane made ! MACFARLANE'S DUG-OUT 9 For when the night was dark with dread, and the day was red with death, And the whimper of the speeding steel passed hke a shuddering breath, And the air was thick with winged war, riven shard, and shrieking shell, And all the earth did spit and spume Hke the cauldron hot of Hell : When the heart of man might falter, and his soul be sore afraid — We just dived into the dug-out that Mac- farlane made !* Deep is the sleep I've had therein, as free from sense of harm. As when my curly head was laid in the crook of my mother's arm ; My old great-coat for coverlet, curtain, and counterpane. While patter, patter on the roof, came the shrapnel lead hke rain ; * It may interest the reader to know that these lines are being written during a very considerable bombardment, in which one misses the friendly proximity of just such a dug-out as Macfar- lane's. 10 BALLADS OF BATTLE And when a huge " Jack Johnson " made us a sudden raid, I was dug out from the dug-out that Macfarlane made ! If in the unseen scheme of things, as well may be, it chance That I bequeath my body to the soil of sunny France, I will not cavil though they leave me sleeping where I fell. With just a little wooden cross my lowly tale to tell : I do not ask for sepulture beneath some cypress shade — Just a six by two feet " dug-out " by Macfarlane made. Postscript. — In the trenches, as will be readily understood, one has no continual abiding place. Consequently the dug-out of the picture is not the dug-out of the poem, and when last I looked in upon Macfarlane, he was swinging contentedly in a hammock of his own construction. It unfortunately falls to me to add a postscript of sadder import. Since the Advance of 25th September, my comrade has been counted among the missing. FREIMDUN DHU: THE BLACK WATCH Betwixt 1 71 5 and 1745 several independent com- panies were raised to secure the pacification of the Highlands. From the dark character of the tartans worn by most of the composing clans the companies became known as the Freimdun Dhu, or Black Watch, in contradistinction to the Leidman Diarag, or Red Soldiers. After their embodiment into a regiment of the line, no clan having a supreme claim to impress its tartan upon the whole, and the Colonel, Lord Crawford, being a Lowlander, the peculiarly dark pattern still worn was devised. Dark is thy tartan, Freimdun Dhu ; Black and green, and green and blue : Now in it I see thread of red — The blood our Highland host has shed. II MY RIFLE SOME MAXIMS OF SERGEANT J. CALLARY To the humour, and the good humour, of the genial sergeant I owe it that the period of my early- drilling, which might thinkably have been a time of deadly dullness, afforded me much entertainment, as well as not a little valuable instruction. The sergeant was always at his best in dilating upon the virtues of the rifle, and the necessity for treating it with respect. I'm the Soldier's surest friend : I will neither break nor bend. Straight and sterling, tried and true ; You keep me and I'll keep you. Bolt and barrel, butt and band ; Caress me with a careful hand. Stock and swivel, sling and sight ; Rub me down, and keep me right. Striker, trigger, cocking-piece ; Give 'em all some elbow-grease. 12 SERGEANT J. CALLARY 14 BALLADS OF BATTLE Clean me clean, and oil me well ; I'll kill your man and never tell. Leave me dirty, oil me ill ; You're the chap I'm going to kill. Leave me lying all awry ; You're the feller's going to die. Daily do but pull me through ; I will do the same for you. Only use a *' two by four " — Nothing less, and nothing more. '* Pull-through " rag will do the trick ; A shirt or sock is going to stick ! And keep your bottle full of ile — Remember the Virgins' parabile ! Handle me with care, I beg, I'm not so stout as old Mons Meg ! Do not pitch me on the ground — To break me, a hammer can be found ! MY RIFLE 15 The soldier doesn't clean his rifle Has listed with intent to trifle. The chap who doesn't clean his gun Is sorriest soldier 'neath the sun. I'm the Soldier's surest friend : I will neither break nor bend. Straight and sterling, tried and true — You keep me and I'll keep you. THE DEAD MAN He lay unasking of our aid, His grim face questioning the sky, While we stood by with idle spade, And gazed on him with curious eye. Upon one hand a little ring ; A little earth clutched in one hand, As he would bear some kindly thing Unto that new and unknown land. This unnamed heap of human dust, Buoyant so late with human breath, And now majestic and august With th' vast indifference of death ! Within that many-mansioned brain, A-through its corridors and cells, Do no ghosts flit ? Comes ne'er again Old Memory with her mystic spells ? i6 THE DEAD MAN 17 Do images of wife or child Round these unseeing eyes still hover ? Still heart, comes there no stirring wild, No cry for her might be thy lover ? Nay, silence alone doth clothe thy clay. Thy mien is big with only mystery ; No hieroglyphics here to say Where was thy home, and what thy history. A chilly wind stirs in the grass ; There comes the night-jar's shrilling cry ; I see no recognition pass Into thy once beholding eye. Comes the grim converse of a gun, But brings thee neither fear nor frown ; Thou for thyself a Peace hast won. The bundle of thy hfe laid down. Into its cell thy clay we thrust. And turn, and find we have no tears : Deep be thy sleep, O once dear dust. Through the intolerable years ! THE PENITENT As I lay in the trenches at Noove Chapelle, Where the big guns barked Uke the Hounds o' Hell, Sez I to mysel', sez I to mysel' :— Billy, me boy, here's the end o' you— But if, by good luck, ye should chance to slip thro', Ye'll bid all ye'r evil companions adieu ; Keep the Lord's ten Commands— and Lord Kitchener's two — Sez I to mysel'— at Noove Chapelle. No more women, and no more wine, No more hedgin' to get down the line. No more hoggin' around like a swine, After Noove Chapelle— sez I to mysel'. i8 THE PENITENT 19 But only the good God in Heaven knows The wayward way that a soldier goes, And He must ha' left me to walk by my- sel' — For three times I've fell, since Noove Chapelle. Once at Bethune and twice at Est aires. The divil gripped hould o' me unawares — Yet often and often I've prayed me prayers, Since I prayed by mysel', at Noove Chapelle. Well, the Lord above, who fashioned the French, May bethink how bewitchin' is wine and a wench To a chap that's been tied for three weeks to a trench. Around Noove Chapelle — that black border o' Hell. 20 BALLADS OF BATTLE And me throat was dry and the night was damp, And the rum was raw — and red was the lamp ! — And — Billy, me boy, ye'r a bit o' a scamp, That's the truth to tell — tho' I sez it mysel'. What's worritin' me isn't fear that they'll miss Me out o' the ranks in the realms o' bliss ; It ain't hope o' Heaven, nor horror o' Hell, But just breakin' the promise, 'twixt God and mysel'. Made at Noove Chapelle. Well, there's always a way that is open to men When they gets the knock-out — that's get up again ; And, sure now, ould Satan ain't yet counted ten ! I'm game for another good bout wi' my- sel'— As at Noove Chapelle. THE BULLET Every bullet has its billet ; Many bullets more than one : God ! Perhaps I killed a mother When I killed a mother's son. 21 THE GREEN GRASS The dead spake together last night, And one to the other said : " Why are we dead ? " They turned them face to face about In the place where they were laid : " Why are we dead ? " " This is the sweet, sweet month o' May, And the grass is green o'erhead — Why are we dead ? " The grass grows green on the long, long tracks That I shall never tread — Why are we dead ? " The lamp shines like the glow-worm spark, From the bield where I was bred — Why am I dead ? " 23 THE GREEN GRASS 23 The other spake : " Fve wife and weans, Yet I he in this waesome bed — Why am I dead ? " 0, I hae wife and weans at hame, And they clamour loud for bread — Why am I dead ? " Quoth the first : "I have a sweet, sweet heart, And this night we should hae wed — Why am I dead ? " And I can see another man Will mate her in my stead, Now I am dead." They turned them back to back about In the grave where they were laid : — ** Why are we dead ? " ** I mind o' a field, a fought en field, Where the bluid ran routh and red — Now I am dead." c 24 BALLADS OF BATTLE " I mind o' a field, a stricken field, And a waeful wound that bled — Now I am dead." They turned them on their backs again, As when their souls had sped, And nothing further said. The dead spake together last night, And each to the other said, " Why are we dead ? " STAND-TO ! I'd just crawled into me dug-out, And pulled me coat over me 'ead, When the Corpor-al He begins to bawl, And these were the words he said : " Stand-to Show a leg ! — Get a move on, You ! — Ye's can't lie and snore. Till the end o' the war — Stand-to !— Stand-to ! STAND-TO ! " I was just a-dreamin' of 'Ome Sweet 'Ome, A-top of a fewer bed ; And Sister Nell Had looked in to tell Of tea, and of toasted bread — "Stand-to!"— Of a sudden a change of view — " Come on — you there — Take a sniff o' fresh air — Stand-to !— Stand-to ! STAND-TO I " 25 AT THE DAWN A Drama of the Trenches. Orion raised his red right hand As marshalhng the starry host : Below I took my lonely stand, Somewhere anigh the Lonely Post. Orion wheels adown the sky j A broken moon to Westward wends, While I cast up a wistful eye. Counting the stars among my friends ; Counting each burning bead that hung Suspend in that great rosary Which makes, unto the Might that flung. An Orison continually. And then the broken moon went out, And one by one went out the stars. And, welcome as a friendly shout. Dawn broke from out her prison bars. 26 28 BALLADS OF BATTLE But such a dawn as might have been Prelude to an horrific play ; As if some Scientist had foreseen The diverse drama of the day. A dawn of streaks and streams of red, Like swelHng gouts of spilten blood ; Blood-red the sun that raised its head Above the broken, blasted wood : As Lazarus risen from the dead, Silent each dust-clad sentry stood. And with the dawn there came a gun, And with the gun there came a cry ; Along the trench it seemed to run That sound of strong men when they die. Then one came running in all haste, With, " Water, water, for Christ's sake ! " I hitched the bottle from my waist And marvelled how his hand did shake. AT THE DAWN 29 I saw the shaking of his hand, Which dripped with blood was not his own : I saw each drop merge with the sand, Like seed some Evil One had sown. Then he was gone, and I stood there. Still gazing on the reddened ground, And musing whether wheat or tare From such a sowing would be found. And there was silence for a space. Save that a lark sang on the wing ; Then, crouching low, with grim-set face, Up the long trench came Hira Singh. He paused by me, and with a blow He struck the stopper in his flask. And told me what I sought to know Before my tongue had time to ask. He told me what I sought to know Before my tongue had time to ask. —"At the Dawn. AT THE DAWN 31 " Finished ! " he said, and closed his eyes, As he had closed those of the dead ; And twice he snored, as one who tries To breathe through blood : ' * Finished ! ' ' he said. A soldier's cross stood in the corn, A simple cross as one might see : Bethought me of that other morn That broke o'er barren Calvary. And of the word the Christ had cried When His long agony was done : The " It is finished ! " when He died And His redeeming work begun. And of the kings have warred and reigned, Since Jesu died, the King of Men, And of the blood that earth hath stained, And of the streams must flow again. And in the soldier's sacrifice, I saw the Christ's in its degree : A sinful life — let it suffice. He laid it down for you and me. 32 BALLADS OF BATTLE For one a little cross of deal, For One the Age-Enduring Tree ; Yet each frail, faltering flesh did feel In hands and feet the wounding steel ; Each died that mankind might be free, Each gave a Hfe for you and me. THE DRUM Come to me and I will give you flesh." Old Pibrochadh. Come ! Says the drum ; Though graves be hollow, Yet follow, follow : Come ! Says the drum. Life ! Shrills the fife. Is in strife — Leave love and wife : Come ! Says the drum. Ripe ! Screams the pipe. Is the field — Swords and not sickles wield : Come ! Says the drum. 33 34 BALLADS OF BATTLE The drum Says, Come ! Though graves be hollow, Yet follow, follow : Come ! Says the drum. SOLDIER, SOLDIER Wastrel, wastrel, standing in the street, Billy-cock upon your head ; boots that show your feet. Rookie, rookie, not too broad of chest, But game to do your bloomin' bit with the bloomin' best. Rookie, rookie, growhng at the grub ; Loth to wash behind the ears when you take your tub. Rookie, rookie, licking into shape — Thirty-six inch round the buff showing by the tape. Rookie, rookie, boots and buttons clean ; Mustachios waxing stronger ; military mien. Rookie, rookie, drilHng in the square, Britain's ancient glory in your martial air. 35 56 BALLADS OF BATTLE Rookie, rookie, swagger-stick to twirl ; Waving hands to serving maids ; walking out the girl. Soldier, soldier, ordered to the front. Marching forward eager-eyed, keen to bear the brunt. Soldier, soldier, bidding her good-bye — ** When I come back I'll marry you, so, darling, don't you cry ! " Soldier, soldier, sailing in the ships, Cigarettes and curious oaths betwixt your boyish lips. Soldier, soldier, standing in the trench ; Wading through the mud and mire, stifiing^'m the stench. Soldier, soldier, 'mid the din and dirt. More than monastic tortures moving in your shirt. Soldier, soldier, facing shot and shell ; Jesting as you gaze within the open Gate of Hell. SOLDIER, SOLDIER 37 Soldier, soldier, charging on the foe, With your comrade's dying cry to urge you as you go. Soldier, soldier, stilly lying dead, With a dum-dum bullet through your dunder head. Soldier, soldier, with a smile of grace, Breaking through the grime and grit on your blood-swept face. Soldier, soldier, sound will be your sleep. You will never waken, though you hear her weep. Soldier, soldier How I love you ! "I CANNA SEE THE SERGEANT" Those readers who have recollection of the drilling days of the 4th Battalion Black Watch may remem- ber to have heard some words — often, fortunately, not entirely intelligible — which we rendered lustily as a marching song, to the Gaelic melody, " Horo My Nut-Brown Maiden." In these strenuous and sad times the phrase, " I Canna See the Sergeant," which formed the owre-turn o' the sang, has often assumed a new and deeper significance. I CANNA see the sergeant, I canna see the sergeant, I canna — see the — sergeant,* He's owre far awa'. Bring the wee chap nearer, Bring the wee chap nearer, O bring the — wee chap — nearer — He's owre bloomin' sma'. We canna see the sergeant. The five foot five inch sergeant, * To be sung in staccato fashion. 38 I CANNA SEE THE SERGEANT" 39 We canna — see the — sergeant For smoke, and shell, and a'— Now we can see him clearer. Now we can see him nearer — Upon the topmost parapet He's foremost o' us a' ! We canna see the sergeant, The sma', stout-hearted sergeant, We canna — see the — sergeant. He's dead and gone awa'. Bring the wee chap nearer, Bring the wee chap nearer, O, he has grown the dearer Now that he's far awa' ! ^^WHEN WE REMEMBERED " Think not, far friends, that we forget. In these red realms of wrack and rue, The white diffs round our England set, The Channel waters white and blue. Think not, that on this smiling plain, Where, snake-like coiled, the trenches lie, In dreams we do not see again Our bleak hills buttressing the sky. Think not, within the grim, grey lines. Haunted by gaunt and grimy men, Comes no cool chaunting of the pines That guard one well-remembered glen. By black hearths in the broken farm. Bethink ye we remember not The fire-glow, welcoming and warm. Which Ughts the path to one loved cot?— Bethink ye we remember not ? 40 42 BALLADS OF BATTLE Here, where the ruined chapels raise Their blackened beams against the blue, Comes echo of the hymn of praise Sung by our home-folk, leal and true. Here, by the stile, where lovers stood. And strong hands laboured with the sheaves, Where are dear drops of human blood As crimson as the poppy leaves ; Here, where the ripened harvests rot — Where rot an hundred ungraved men, Bethink ye we remember not The little Croft beneath the Ben ? Bethink ye we have aught forgot ? Bethink ye we remember not ? BROKEN TREES AT ERICHT REDOUBT THE HOME-COMING When this blast is over-blown, And the beacon fires shall burn, And in the street Is the sound of feet — They also shall return. When the bells shall rock and ring, When the flags shall flutter free, And the choirs shall sing, '* God save our King " — They shall he there to see. When the brazen bands shall play. And the silver trumpets blow, And the soldiers come To the tuck of drum — They shall he there also. 44 THE HOME-COMING 45 When that which was lost is found ; When each shall have claimed his kin, Fear not they shall miss Mother's clasp, maiden's kiss — For no strange soil might hold them in. When Te Deums seek the skies, When the Organ shakes the Dome, A dead man shall stand At each live mans hand — For they also have come home. THE MIRROR To N. S., on the gift of a Metal Mirror received in the trenches. When in this burnished steel I trace My own begrimed and hair-grown face, And, as of old, still smile to see Some of the boy unquelled in me : I also vision a fair lawn, O'er which a placid sky is drawn, While the broad firth flows at our feet — For heaven itself a mirror meet : A rosy copse, a roseate sky. And we together, you and I, In the garden at the cool of e'en, Talking of dear dead things have been ; Turning our dearly-boughten store Of Memories, o'er and o'er and o'er — So fragrant that each well might be Rose petal from life's thorny tree — Till full hearts fountain into tears To vivify these long-dead years ! 46 THE MIRROR 47 When in this shining steel I trace My own begrimed and hair-grown face ; A magic impress — I shall see The smile of him who sent it me ! TYPICAL BARN BILLET THE BAYONET The rifle bullet ranges far, The bursting shell seeks wide. The mortar and machine guns are Both trusty friends and tried ; But the swiftest weapon in the war Is the steel swings by my side. The rifle rings out sharp and clear. The " 75 " can speak, And viciously upon the ear Sound "swish-bang" and "pip-squeak," But the bayonet is the Silent Fear In this game of hide-and-seek. The bullet speeds with wail and sob. The shrapnel showers its hails, But the keen-edged bayonet point can probe Where the leaden pellet fails ; And the " white arm " finishes the job — And dead men tell no tales ! 48 THE BAYONET 49 The mortar gun is full of ire When once ye do begin it, The facile mitrailleuse can fire Seven hundred rounds a minute, But " La RosaHe " will never tire When once her finger's in it. The blade upon the barrel clicks When the battle is begun. And often has the Captain's " Fix ! " Carried us out o' one ; Then thrust and parry — these the tricks By which the trench is won. With thrust and parry, lunge and point, Point, parry, lunge, and thrust ; Our knees seem going at the joint. Our hearts beat fit to burst — And then — may Christ our souls aroint, — We stab at what seems accurst ! — Ugh ! The rifle bullet ranges far. The bursting shell seeks wide, The mortar and machine guns are Both trusty tools and tried ; But the surest weapon in the war Is the steel swings by my side ! *^ STAY-AT-HOME HEARTS ARE BEST"— NOT 'ALE The men who stay at home at ease, And go to bed just when they please. Have lots o' baccy and o' beer, And yet — I'd rather be out here ! The chaps who stay at home and dine Have heaps of wictuals and o' wine, With walnuts — shelled — and all good cheer — It's better to be shelled out here ! (Swish — bang !) The men who stay at home at ease Need never try to wash their knees In dixie* lids — yet never fear, I'd rather far be dirty here ! * A mess tin — very literally. 50 ^'STAY-AT-HOME HEARTS" 51 The chaps at home they earn good pay, And don clean Unen every day, While my shirt runs — its wild career ! Yet — rather I'd be lousy here ! (Yes, even that !) The chaps who stay — the lucky dogs ! — Can stroll around in tailored togs, While my make-up is something queer — Yet — better be a scarecrow here ! The chaps who stay at home and play At tennis through a summer day. Need ne'er fall bleeding to the rear — And yet — I'd rather play out here ! Sweet-hearting ? — ah ! you lucky chaps Who go a-wooing — well, perhaps, Unless I get a nasty whack, ril get a girl when I go back. Why, yes, who knows ? there still might be Some girl to love a bloke like me ; There's Dolly — would she drop a tear If I went under over here ? 52 BALLADS OF BATTLE The men who Hve at home at ease. May Hst — then 'LIST — just as they please, For me, by Christ ! my conscience clear, I think I'd rather die out here ! (Stretcher-bearers !) CORPORAL, GURKHA REGIMENT INVOCATION : NIGHT IN THE TRENCHES Creator of the stars Great and Little Bear — Have us in Thy care. Thou who set Orion, Watch and ward to keep — Guard a soldier's sleep. Hand that swung the Spheres, Strawed the Pleiades — Have pity upon these. Hand that sways the plough ; Win that stays the Pole- Sow thy good seed now, Guide an errant soul. 53 LA CROIX ROUGE A Wayside Calvary in Flanders. Two thousand years since Christ was crucified ; Since thorn and nail did torment that frail flesh : Again I see Him hanged on a tree, And crucified afresh ! Once more that darkness over all the land; The graves — the graves are full — they give not up their dead : The bitter cup Is lifted up, The crown pierces His head. The scourging rod, the mocking reed are His, The veritable Son of Man and God ; Through feet and hands The iron stands. The Cross is red with blood. 54 LA CROIX ROUGE 55 Barabbas is released unto the World ; The thieves — the thieves are unrepentant both — With swords and staves A crowd of knaves Come forth with jest and oath. Again the brutal soldiery cast lots ; The earth is rent with wrath, and rack, and rue, Comes like a sigh That lonely cry : " They know not what they do ! " Thou Kaiser, who hast crucified thy Christ ; Judas, Pilatus, Peter — three in one ! Who shall it be Shall say to thee : Servant, thy work well done ? For thirty pieces Judas sold his Lord, And Peter but denied his Master thrice ; And Pilate stands With washen hands — Princeling, what was thy price ? 56 BALLADS OF BATTLE Better, Caesar — Caiaphas, High Priest, With all thy servile Scribes and Phari- sees — Thou'dst ne'er been born Than put to scorn One of the least of these ! Proud Kaiser, who has drowned the world in tears. And deluged all the earth with reddest rain — Christ's brow is torn With crown of thorn — Thine bears the brand of Cain ! O King in name, who might have been in deed, Who chose the darkness rather than the light : I see thee go Forth from thy foe — And it is night I "WHEN THE ARMADA SAILED FROM SPAIN" " God blew with His winds, and they were scat- tered." — Medal struck to commemorate defeat of the Armada. When the Armada sailed from Spain, And launched its might upon the main, Bold Drake put out from Plymouth Hoe, And God's great wind began to blow — And it was scattered ; Well, what was then, brave boys. Will be again, brave, bully boys. Aye ! What was then will be again 1 When Wellington with his brave few Met Buonaparte at Waterloo, The British bayonets drove Nap, back To St. Helena's lonely rack, Broken and battered ; Our steel's as true, brave boys. Our blood's as blue, brave, bully boys, And Britain trusts to me and you ! 57 PQ V I? I THE BILLET A ROOF that hardly holds the rain ; Walls shaking to the hurricane ; Great doors upon their hinges creaking ; Great rats upon the rafters squeaking — A midden in the courtyard reeking — Yet oft I've sheltered, snug and warm, Within that friendly old French farm ! To trudge in from the soaking trench — The blasts that bite, the rains that drench- To loosen off your ponderous pack. To drop the harness from your back. Deliberate pull each muddy boot From each benumbed, frost-bitten foot ; To wrap your body in your blanket, To mutter o'er a " Lord be thankit ! " Sink out of sight below the straw. Then — Owre the hills and far awa' ! * !(: * * + Perchance to waken from your sleep, And hear the big guns growling deep, 59 6o BALLADS OF BATTLE Turn on your side, but breathe a prayer For the beggars you have left up " there." Then in the morn to stretch your legs, And hear the hens cluck o'er their eggs ; And chanticleer's bestirring blare ; The whinnying of the Captain's mare ; Contented lowing of the kine, Complacent grunting of the swine ; Chirping of birds beneath the eaves, Whisper of winds among the leaves, And — sound that soul of man rejoices — The pleasant hum of women's voices — With all the cheery dins that be In a farmyard community ; While sunUght bursting thro' the thatch Bums in the black barn, patch and patch. But now, your eyes and ears you ope — ■ The pipes are skirling, "Johnnie Cope " — * * There is something slightly sardonic in the fact that the old Jacobite rant, " Hey, Johnnie Cope, are ye waukin' yet ? " which was used for the berousing and belabouring of the Whigs, should now do duty as Reveille to a Highland regiment. So, at least, it seems to one at seven o'clock of a cold winter's morning ! 62 BALLADS OF BATTLE And you arise to toil and trouble, And certainly to ** double ! double ! " — Of the day's drills, most grudged of all, That lagging hour called " physical ! " Breakfast, of tea, and bread, and ham, With just a colouring of jam ; Or, if you have the sous to pay, A feast of ceitfs and cafe-au-lait. Comes ten o'clock and we fall in. With rifle cleaned, and shaven chin ; Once more we work the " manual " through. And then " drill in platoons " we do Till one, or maybe even two. At last " cook-house " the pipers play, And so we dine as best we may. And now a shout that never fails To fetch us forth, " Here come the mails ! " — While one rejoices, t'other rails THE BILLET 63 Because he has received no letter — Next time the Fates may use him better ! Then comes an hour beneath a tree, With " Omar Khayyam " on your knee, While wanton winds, in idle sport, Bombard you after harmless sort With apple blossoms from the bough — Ah ! here is Paradise enow ! Tis now that mystic hour of night When — parcels open — no respite Is given to cake, sweetmeat, sardine ; Our zest would turn a gourmet green With envy, could he only see The meal out here, that's yclept " tea." The night has come, and all are hearty, Being exempt from a '' working-party " : And so we gather round the fire To chat,, and presently conspire To pass an hour with song and story — The grave, the gay, ghostly or gory, — 64 BALLADS OF BATTLE A tale, let's say, both weird and fierce, By Allan Poe or Ambrose Bierce,* Then Skerry — Peace be to his Shade !- May play us Gounod's ** Serenade," And, gazing thro' the broken beams. Perchance we see the starry gleams. But " Lights-out ! " sounds ; " Good nights " are said. And so we bundle off to bed. Sweet dreams infest each drowsy head And kindly Ghosts that work no harm Flit round about that old French farm ! * The greatest compliment I ever received to my power as a story-teller was paid me by a comrade, who, on the morning after the recital of Bierce 's " The Middle Toe of the Right Foot," presented me with a small model of a human foot, minus a toe, which he had executed in the wax of a candle ! A GHOST STORY AT THE FRONT A tale, let's say, both weird and fierce. By Allan Poe or Ambrose Bierce. —"The Billet. NOCTURNALS Tommy's Night Thoughts in the Trenches. I I WONDER are there stupid wars In any of them other stars ? — Kaisers and Kings, And mix o' things, And all this mess ? — Not 'alf, I guess. Not even in yon ruddy Mars. II As I stamp my feet to keep them hot. When a' the trench is still, O, I wad gi'e a hell o' a lot For the sight o' a Scottish hill, For the clasp o' a Scottish lassie's waist, And — weel — just to say a Httle taste O' a guid auld Scottish gill ! 66 NOCTURNALS 67 III Lord of the Night, be near me now. Strength for my Heart, Shield for my Brow ; And when Thy white Light returns again — Lord of the Day, be with me then. IV 7.55 A.M. A funny world — There's him, And me, Both thirstin', be it understood, To draw the other's bleedin' blood — And yet, I'd bet A bob— and win it — That at this minute. Both he, And me. Are thirstin' most — to draw our dixie hd O' TEA ! 68 BALLADS OF BATTLE V SUMMING UP ! When our wrath is expended, When the world war is ended, It seems Hke to me That this old earth will be More broken than mended. VI BON VOYAGE ! The sky is the sea, And ships are the clouds. And dead sailor men Swing into the shrouds — Heigh-ho ! Some day I shall sail far away ! THE COMBAT " For I am fearfully and wonderfully made." I WITH my mouth must munch my food, Even as the monster in the wood, And yet, dear heart, my Hps to thine Have clung in ecstasies divine ! I feel my ribs like prison-bars. And still, I comprehend the stars ; Through the white mas'nry of my bones A sleepless spirit stalks and groans ! This pulsing heart is all afire With passion and with wild desire, And still, I turn dim yearning eyes Thrice daily to the unanswering skies. I have in me to burn and slay — And yet a little child will lay Its soft warm cheek upon my cheek, And I, as it, am mild and meek ! 69 70 BALLADS OF BATTLE The hunger of the wolf I have, And yet, I hunger most for love, And often have I wept to scan The misery of my brother-man. I hear, within the forest wild, A whispering : Thou art our child ! And yet, again I hear a call Within the vast Cathedral. Oft have I clasped thee in my arms, And loved thee for thy woman's charms ; Yet have I sought, and seemed to see And love, a woman's soul in thee ! The fleshly lust, the pride of life, The joyaunce in a selfish strife. The din of battle in my ear — And yet a still small voice I hear ! I would not do the thing I would, I shun the evil, seek the good ; Comes prompting from the past : You must ! And pulls me backward in the dust. THE COMBAT 71 My hands are clawed to clutch and keep ; My eyes grow heavy unto sleep, I crouch beneath a poor roof-tree, I wake — and I am still with Thee. I know that when I come to die, My bones all strawed about shall lie ; The hand that fashioned shall annul This cunning sculpture of my skull. O Thou behind that outmost star, Have mercy if Thy plans we mar, For lo ! we know not what we are ! I with my mouth must munch my food Like uncouth creatures in the wood. Yet from my lips what prayers arise Alway to the unanswering skies ! THE MOUTH-ORGAN When drum and fife are silent, When the pipes are packed away, And the soldiers go Too near the foe For the bugle's noisy bray ; When our haversacks are heavy, And our packs like Christian's load. Then Jimmy Morgan* Plays his old mouth-organ. To cheer us on our road. " It's a long, long way to Tipper ary — " * Though for obvious reasons of rhyme I have here ventured to appropriate the classic name " Jimmy Morgan," nevertheless the best mouth- organist in D Company, if not in the battalion, is 2203 Private William Brough. He informs me that his present instrument is something the worse for wear. 73 THE MOUTH-ORGAN 73 When by the shrunken river RecUned the great god Pan, And to his needs, Cut down the reeds — And music first began ; Then all mankind did marvel At a melody so sweet ; But when Jimmy Morgan Plays his old mouth-organ, Even Pan takes second seat ! When Orpheus, of old time, Did strike his magic lute, He lorded it. As he thought fit. O'er boulder, bird, and brute ; And great trees were uprooted. And roo^marched, so to say. But when Jimmy Morgan Plays his old mouth-organ, You should see us march away. 74 BALLADS OF BATTLE When the Piper Pied of Hamelin, In the legend of renown, His pipe did play, He charmed away The children from the town : But behold our whole Battalion — To the joy of wife and wench — Led by Jimmy Morgan, And his old mouth-organ, March forward to the trench. " Here we are, here we are, here we are again ! " O, an overture by Wagner Strikes sweetly on mine ear, And that noble three, Brahms, Bach, and Bee- thoven, I love to hear ; But when the rains are falling. And when the roads are long, Give me Jimmy Morgan And his old mouth-organ To lead our little song. " A-roving, a-roving ; we'll gang nae mair a-roving ! ' ' THE MOUTH-ORGAN 75 Sometimes he pipes us grave notes. Sometimes he pipes us gay ; Till broken feet Take up the beat Of quick-step or Strathspey : But he plays upon our heart-strings When he plays a Scottish tune — Hear Jimmy Morgan And his old mouth-organ At " The Banks o' Bonnie Doon " ! He has a twist upon his mouth, A twinkle in his e'e ; A roguish air, A deil-ma-care, Like the Piper o' Dundee : Faith ! we would dance thro' half o' France, And a' the trenches carry. If Jimmy Morgan On his old mouth-organ, Did but give us " Annie Laurie " ! 76 BALLADS OF BATTLE And when the war is over — The war we mean to win — And Kaiser Bill Has had his pill, And we boys march thro' BerUn ; " Unter den Linden " going, We'll need no pipes to blow — Just Jimmy Morgan And his old mouth-organ. Leading us as we go ! — " Highland laddie, Highland laddie ; whar hae you been a the day?''"" And when this life is ended, And Morgan gone aloft, He will not carp Tho' he get no harp, Nor trumpet sweet and soft ; But if there be a place for him In the Angelic choir, Give Jimmy Morgan His old mouth-organ. And he'll play and never tire. * The Regimental March of the Black Watch. THE MOTHER " Mother o' mine ; O Mother o' mine." My mother rose from her grave last night. And bent above my bed, And laid a warm kiss on my lips, A cool hand on my head ; And, ** Come to me, and come to me, My bonnie boy," she said. And when they found him at the dawn, His brow with blood defiled, And gently laid him in the earth. They wondered that he smiled. n TOMMY AND FRITZ He hides behind his sand-bag, And I stand back o' mine ; And sometimes he bellows, " Hullo, John Bull ! " And I hollers, " German swine ! " And sometimes we both lose our bloomin' rag. And blaze all along the Hne. Sometimes he whistles his 'Ymn of 'Ate, Or opens his mug to sing. And when he gives us " Die Wacht am Rhein " I give 'im " God Save the King " ; And then — we " get up the wind " again, And the bullets begin to ping — (If we're in luck our machine gun nips A working squad on the wing.) 78 TOMMY AND FRITZ 79 Sometimes he shouts, ** Tommy, come over ! " And we fellers bawl out, " Fritz, If yer wants a good warm breakfast, Walk up and we'll give you fits ! " And sometimes our great guns begin to growl, And blows his front line to bits. And when our shrapnel has tore his wire. And his parapet shows a rent, We over and pays him a friendly call With a bayonet — but no harm meant. And he — well, when he's resuscitate, He returns us the compliment ! I stand behind my sand-bag. And he hides back o' his'en ; And, but for our bloomin' uniforms, We might both be convicts in pris'n ; And sometimes I loves him a little bit — And sometimes I 'ate like p'ison. 8o BALLADS OF BATTLE For sometimes I mutters " Belgium," Or ** Lusitani — a," And I slackens my bay'net in its sheath, And stiffens my lower jaw. And " An eye for an eye ; a tooth for a tooth," Is all I know of the Law. But sometimes when things is quiet, And the old kindly stars come out, I stand up behind my sand-bag. And think, '' What's it all about ? " And — tho' Fm a damned sight better nor him. Yet sometimes I have a doubt. That if you got under his hide you would see A bloke with a heart just the same's you and me ! THE BROKEN HEART I FOUND a silver sixpence, A sixpence, a sixpence, I found a silver sixpence. And I brake it in twa ; I gied it till a sodger, A sodger, a sodger, I gied it till a sodger. Before he gaed awa'. I have a heart that's broken, That's broken, that's broken ; I bear a heart that's broken. That's broken in twa — For I gied it till a sodger, A sodger, a sodger, I gied it till a sodger. Before he gaed awa' ! 8i BIG GUNS Big guns baying, Baying thro' the night, What are ye saying Of the fight ? Who are ye slaying ? Big guns booming, Booming thro' the night, Who are ye dooming To endless glooming. In each fell flight ? Great guns growling, Growling till the day. Like wild winds howling ; Like wild beasts prowling- What is thy prey ? 82 BIG GUNS «3 Big guns baying, Baying thro' the night, What are ye saying Of the fight ?— Who are ye slaying ? SUBIDAR MAJOR JOCUNDAR SINGH 69th PUNJABIS PIOU-PIOU The British Tommy Atkins to the French. Your trousies is a funny red, Your tunic is a funny blue, Your cap sets curious on your 'ead — And yet, by Gawd, your 'eart sits true, Piou-piou ! Your menu's even worse nor mine. Your pay a day is but a sou ; But still, you blokes have broke the line — Fm proud to fight along o' you, Piou-piou ! Your lingo I do not compr-ee — A necessary word or two — But, '* deux bier's " enough for me, And here's the best o' health to you, Piou-piou ! 84 PIOU-PIOU MARCHING Marching, marching, On the old-time track ; Soldier song upon my lip. Haversack upon my hip, Pack upon my back ; Linton on my left hand, On my right side Jack — Marching, marching. Steel swung at my thigh. Marching, marching, Who so gay as I ? (Left, left !) Marching, marching. On the same old track ; Sorrow gnawing at my heart, Mem'ry piercing like a dart, Care perched on my back ; Linton on my left hand — But, alas ! poor Jack ! Marching, marching. Quietly does he lie. Marching, marching. Who so sad as I ? (Left, Mi— LEFT/) 86 HOLLOW TREE BIVOUAC PICK AND SPADE The Plaint of Tommy — ^aching. Out here we call a spade a spade, and a shovel a shovel — with embellishment ! Pick and spade, Pick and spade, Five hundred miles o' trench we've made, Five hundred thousand sandbags laid Wi' pick and spade. Pick and spade Pick and spade, My apron's tore, and my kilt is frayed. And the hide off my horny hands is flayed — I wish to Gawd on the farm I'd stayed Wi' pick and spade. Pick and spade, Pick and spade ; What made the stoutest heart afraid ? — When the S.M. shoved in his head and said : 88 PICK AND SPADE 89 " The whole of the fourteenth platoon will parade Wi' pick and spade ! " Pick and spade, Pick and spade, Every man jack of us all of a trade ; " Fall in the blokes o' the Navvy's Brigade, Wi' pick and spade ! " Pick and spade, Pick and spade, Thingumabob 90° in the shade ; On thro' the mud and the muck we wade — A dead man's skull — and I've broken the blade O' my bluidy old spade ! Pick and spade, Pick and spade ; This is the way that the War Game's played — Bill's got hit i' the leg and is off to First Aid— 90 BALLADS OF BATTLE " I wish to 'Eaven 't had been me ! " I prayed : '* Damn this pick and spade ! " Pick and spade, Pick and spade, I wish to Gawd that the blokes wi' red braid Round their caps, for only a spell could be made To parade For a trick o' our trade Wi' the pick and spade ! SHEATH NOT THE SWORD " Peace, peace, when there is no peace." Sheath not the Sword ere yet the strife is ended ; Prate not of peace before proud wills are bended — Sheath not the Sword ! Sheath not the Sword ! What of thy valiant dead ? Twas not for this their rich hearts' blood was shed — Sheath not the Sword ! Sheath not the Sword ! Thousands our kinsmen stand Waiting the issue in that Shadow land — Sheath not the Sword ! 19 92 BALLADS OF BATTLE Sheath not the Sword ! Thousands thy kinsmen wait To enter at thy need stern Death's dark gate- Sheath not the Sword ! Harden thy heart ! Stay not the slaying hand, Till each, erect, stand in his cleansed land — Sheath not the Sword ! Harden thy heart ! Withhold the pitying ear, Until their Hymn of Hate turn to a cry of fear ! — Sheath not the Sword ! CARRYING-PARTY Time 10.30 p.m. Place, Communication Trenches. Wire overhead ! 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 v/eighs 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 ! 93 94 BALLADS OF BATTLE 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.) SONG OF TRUE LOVERS When we two parted. It was a weeping rain ; The sun shall shine upon the day That we two meet again. When we two severed, The stream was drowned in mist ; Upon that eve, with moonlight Its waters will be kiss'd. When we two parted, It was an eerie wind ; When I shall set my sail for home The breezes will be kind. When we two parted, The trees stood gaunt and bare ; They will be bourgeoning with Spring When next we wander there. 95 96 BALLADS OF BATTLE When we two parted, The year was at its close ; Some day, some day, the desert Shall blossom as the rose. When we two parted. The days were full of pain ; When next we meet, we meet, indeed, Never to part again, Dear love. Never to part again. I8I5-I9I5 ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO TO-DAY TO MY GRANDFATHER WHO FOUGHT AT WATERLOO Affectionately Dedicated to my Four Paternal Aunts. Once more the unsheathed sword, once more the speeding shell ; Once more unleashing of the Hounds of Hell; The Nations rage together, and again The Kings are joined for battle on the plain ; Old Europe armed goes forth to smite and slay, Just as a Hundred Years to-day ! 97 98 BALLADS OF BATTLE Grandsire, whom I have never seen, nor held whose hand, Nor heard whose voice — stentorian in command — From some Valhalla of the British dead Perchance thou watchest where our lines are spread : Strengthen my hand ; thy kinsman's heart inspire With some spark of thy ancient martial fire — May my steel be as keen, I pray, As yours, a Hundred Years to-day ! Oft as a boy I strove to swing thy blade From out the scabbard where it long had laid. And fearful felt its edge — the notch, 'twas said, Was compliment from a dead Chasseur's head — And all day waged the mimic fight. Waiting for Blucher — and nurse ! — and night : 1815-1915 99 Thank God ! and I see the children play As I did — was it Yesterday ? I hear your guns growl on through Spain, And then, I hear them once again Take up the old terrific tune Upon that far-off Eighteenth June — Mine ears have learned the measure well At Festubert and Neuve Chapelle — Our friends, forth with us in this fray, Were foes a Hundred Years to-day ! When you rode through this war-racked land Didst ever, prithee, kiss a hand To Jeanne, Yvonne, Marcelle, Marie — Grand-dames of those wave hands to me ? Were girls as sportive and as gay ? — Didst have the heart to say them Nay ? — Was't easy parting with thy pay A Hundred Years Ago to-day ? 100 BALLADS OF BATTLE Grandsire, whose good right hand is long since dust, I hold the same true steel in sacred trust ; From some Valhalla of the British dead Perchance thou watchest where our lines are spread ; Thou knewest whence should come the power When dark the battle-clouds did lower — May thy God be my shield and stay As thine a Hundred Years to-day ! Flanders, \Wi June^ 1915. REQUIEM When the last voyage is ended, And the last sail is furled, When the last blast is weathered. And the last bolt is hurled, And there comes no more the sound of the old ship bell — Sailor, sleep well ! When the Last Post is blown, And the last volley fired, When the last sod is thrown, And the last Foe retired, And thy last bivouac is made under the ground — Soldier, sleep sound ! lOI '^Somewhere in France. 03-79 ~ Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date:^, . , ?00l PreservationTechnologies A WORLD LEADER IN PAPER oacKCBu»-rin„ LEADER IN PAPER PRESERVATION ^O \,^ 111 Thomson Park Drive _ Cranberry Township, PA 16066 ^^^^ (724)779-2111 v-