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UC-NRLF 


B    3    SS3    fiSS 


ROUGH 


RHYME  S 

OFA 
PADRE 


'' wDd^PBirsi'E  Willie" 


BiRKElTyN 

LIBRARY 

UNJVflkfTY  OF 
CALIFOtNiA 


AruN    rtr-rt    lit       kITIm  i  tfV- l'. < 


"ROUGH  RHYMES  OF  J  PADRE 


BY  THE 

Rev.  G.  a.  STUDDERT  KENNEDY, 

M.C,    C.F. 

"  fVoodbiiie    Willie'' 

THE  'ARDEST    PART 

''And  the   'ardest  part  i'  the  world  to  play 
Mim  surely  be  God  'a  part. ' ' 

Cloth,  $1.50 


HODDER  &  STOUGHTON  LIMITED 

PUBLISHERS  -  -  TORONTO 


ROUGH  RHYMES  OF 
A  PADRE 


BY 

**  WOODBINE  WILLIE."  M.C..  C.F. 

Author  of  "The  'Ardest  Part" 


HODDER  &  STOUGHTON  LIMITED 
PUBLISHERS  TORONTO 


Copyright,  Canada,  1918 

HODDER  &  STOUGHTON  LIMITED 

Publishers  Toronto 


PRINTED    IN    CANADA 


TO 

THE     OFriCERS   AND   MEN 

of  the  46th  and  S4th  Infantry 
Divisions  Jiving  here  and  heyond 
the  veil  these  rhymes  are  dedicated 
by  one  who  is  proud  to  have  been 

G.  A.  STUDDERT  KENNEDY, 

M.C.,   C.F. 

"Woodbine  Willie.'' 


009 


Some  of  these  poems  were  printed  at  my 
request  and  gained  great  popularity 
amongst  all  ranks  in  the  B.E.F.  I  feel 
sure  that  through  these  homely  verses 
many  a  man  has  come  to  realise  for  the 
first  time  some  deep  truth  of  the  Sorrow  of 
God  in  this  world's  greatest  agony.  Mr. 
Studdert  Kennedy  has  had  experience  in 
all  parts  of  this  battle  area  as  a  chaplain 
and  knows  and  loves  the  men  for  whom  he 
writes.  I  wish  this  little  book  of  poems 
every  success. 

LLEWELLYN  H.  GWYNNE,  Bp., 

Deputy  Chaplain  General. 

France, 

January,  igi8. 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

Well? 13 

The  Sorrow  of  God     -      -      -      -  21 

Sinner  and  Saint  -      -      -      -  30 

Prayer  Before  an  Attack        -      -  33 

To-day  Thou  shalt  be  with  Me    -  34 

Thy  Will  be  Done      -      -      -      -  36 

The  Secret      ------  41 

Christmas        ------  43 

War  --44 

A  Scrap  of  Paper       -      -      -      -  45 

A  Mother  Understands      -      -      -  46 

Her   Gift 47 

Eternal   Hope        -----  50 

Patience  ------  52 

Truth 54 

Death 58 

Paradise  ------  60 

The  Spirit 61 


CONTENTS— Con«nue(/ 

PAGE 

The  Suffering  God      -       -       -       -  63 

Two   Worlds 69 

English  Land  in  France      -       -       -  71 

His    Mate 73 

April  _---___  76 

"The  Ending  of  the  Day"       -       -  78 

What's  the  Good?       -       -       -       .  80 

Right  is  Might 86 

Judgment -  90 

Wait  ----___  94 

Trees         ----__-  95 

What  are  We  Fighting  for?    -      -  97 


All  the  Author* s  profits  on  this  volume  will 

be  given  to  ST,  DUNSTAN'S  HOSTEL 

FOR  BLINDED  SOLDIERS 


Well  ? 

OUR  Padre  were  a  solemn  bloke, 
We  called  'im  dismal  Jim. 
It  fairly  gave  ye  t'  bloomin'  creeps, 

To  sit  and  'ark  at  'im. 
When  he  were  on  wi'  Judgment  Day, 

Abaht  that  great  white  Throne, 
And  'ow  each  chap  would  'ave  to  stand, 

And  answer  on  'is  own. 
And  i£  'e  tried  to  charnce  'is  arm, 

And  'ide  a  single  sin, 
There'd  be  the  angel  Gabriel, 

Wi'  books  to  do  'im  in. 
'E  'ad  it  all  writ  dahn,  'e  said. 

And  nothin'  could  be  'id, 
'E  'ad  it  all  i'  black  and  white. 

And  'E  would  take  no  kid. 
And  every  single  idle  word, 

A  soldier  charnced  to  say, 
'E'd  'ave  it  all  thrown  back  at  'im, 

I'  court  on  Judgment  Day. 

13 


Well  I  kep'  mindin'  Billy  Briggs, 

A  pal  o'  mine  what  died. 
'E  went  to  'elp  our  sergeant  Smith, 

But  as  'e  reached  'is  side, 
There  came  and  bust  atween  'is  legs, 

A  big  Boche  5.9  pill. 
And  I  picked  up  'is  corpril's  stripes. 

That's  all  there  was  o'  Bill. 
I  called  to  mind  a  stinkin'  night 

When  we  was  carryin'  tea. 
We  went  round  there  by  Limerick  Lane, 

And  Bill  was  a'ead  o'  me. 
'Twere  rainin'  'eavens  'ard,  ye  know. 

And  t'  boards  were  thick  wi'  muck, 
And  umpteen  times  we  slithered  dahn. 

And  got  the  dicksee  stuck. 
Well  when  we  got  there  by  the  switch, 

A  loose  board  tipped  right  up. 
And  Bill,  'e  turned  a  somersault. 

And  dahn  'e  came,  and  whup! 
I've     'eard     men     blind,     I've     'eard     'em 
cuss 

And  I've  'eard  'em  do  it  'ard. 
Well,  'aven't  I  'eard  our  R.S.M., 

Inspectin'  special  guard? 

14 


But  Bill,  'e  left  'im  standin'  still. 

'E  turned  the  black  night  blue, 
And  I  guess  the  Angel  Gabriel 

'Ad  short'and  work  to  do. 
Well,  'ow  would  poor  old  Bill  go  on, 

When  'e  stood  all  alone, 
And  'ad  to  'ear  that  tale  read  out. 

Afore  the  great  white  throne? 
If  what  our  Padre  says  is  right, 

'E'd  'ave  a  rotten  spell. 
And  finish  up  ov  it,  I  s'pose, 

'E'd  'ave  to  go  to  'ell. 
And  yet  'e  were  a  decent  lad. 

And  met  a  decent  end. 
You'll  never  finish  decenter. 

Than  tryin'  to  'elp  a  friend. 
But  some'ow   I   can't   think   it's   right. 

It  ain't  what  God  would  do. 
This  tale  of  all  these  record  books, 

I  think  it's  all  napoo. 
'Twould  let  some  rotten  beggars  in, 

And  keep  some  good  'uns  out. 
There's   lots  of  blokes,  what   does   no 
wrong. 

As  can't  do  nowt  but  shout. 

15 


But    t'other    night    I    dreamed    a 
dream, 

And  just  twixt  me  and  you, 
I  never  dreamed  like  that  afore, 

I  'arf  thinks  it  were  true. 
I  dreamed  as  I  were  dead,  ye  see, 

At  least  as  I  'ad  died. 
For  I  were  very  much  alive. 

Out  there  on  t'other  side. 
I  couldn't  see  no  judgment  court, 

Nor  yet  that  great  white  throne, 
I  couldn't  see  no  record  books, 

I  seemed  to  stand  alone. 
I  seemed  to  stand  alone,  beside 

A  solemn  kind  o'  sea. 
Its  waves  they  got  in  my  inside, 

And  touched  my  memory. 
And  day  by  day,  and  year  by  year, 

My  life  came  back  to  me. 
I  see'd  just  what  I  were,  and  what 

I'd  'ad  the  charnce  to  be. 
And  all  the  good  I  might  'a'  done, 

An'  'adn't  stopped  to  do. 
I  see'd  I'd  made  an  'ash  of  it. 

And  Gawd!  but  it  were  true. 

i6     ' 


A  throng  o'  faces  came  and  went, 

Afore  me  on  that  shore, 
My  wife,  and  Mother,  kiddies,  pals, 

And  the  face  of  a  London  whore. 
And    some    was    sweet,    and    some    was 
sad, 

And  some  put  me  to  shame. 
For  the  dirty  things  I'd  done  to  'em, 

When   I   'adn't  played  the   game. 
Then  in  the  silence  someone  stirred. 

Like  when  a  sick  man  groans. 
And  a  kind  o'  shivering  chill  ran  through 

The  marrer  ov  my  bones. 
And  there  before  me  someone  stood. 

Just  lookin'  dahn  at  me, 
And  still  be'ind  'Im  moaned  and  moaned 

That  everlasting  sea. 
I  couldn't  speak,  I  felt  as  though 

'E  'ad  me  by  the  throat, 
'Twere  like  a  drownin'  fellah  feels. 

Last  moment  'e's  afloat. 
And   'E   said   nowt,    'E   just   stood   still, 

For  I  dunno  'ow  long. 
It  seemed  to  me  like  years  and  years. 

But  time  out  there's  all  wrong. 

17 


What  was  'E  like?     You're  askin'  now. 

Can't  word  it  anyway. 
'E  just  were  'Im,  that's  all  I  knows. 

There's  things  as  words  can't  say. 
It  seemed  to  me  as  though  'Is  face, 

Were  millions  rolled  in  one. 
It  never  changed  yet  always  changed, 

Like  the  sea  beneath  the  sun. 
'Twere  all  men's  face  yet  no  man's  face, 

And  a  face  no  man  can  see, 
And  it  seemed  to  say  in  silent  speech, 

*Ye  did  'em  all  to  Me. 
'The  dirty  things  ye  did  to  them, 

*The  filth  ye  thought  was  fine, 
*Ye  did  'em  all  to  Me,'  it  said, 

'For  all  their  souls  were  Mine.' 
All  eyes  was  in  'Is  eyes, — all  eyes, 

My  wife's  and  a  million  more. 
And  once  I  thought  as  those  two  eyes 

Were  the  eyes  of  the  London  whore. 
And  they  was  sad, — -My  Gawd  'ow  sad, 

With  tears  that  seemed  to  shine. 
And   quivering   bright   wi'   the   speech    o' 
light. 

They  said,  '  'Er  soul  was  Mine.' 

i8 


And  then  at  last  'E  said  one  word, 

'E  just  said  one  word  'Well?' 
And  I  said  in  a  funny  voice, 

Tiease  can  I  go  to  'Ell?' 
And  'E  stood  there  and  looked  at  me, 

And  'E  kind  o'  seemed  to  grow. 
Till  'E  shone  like  the  sun  above  my  'ead, 

And  then  'E  answered  'No 
'You  can't,  that  'Ell  is  for  the  blind, 

'And  not  for  those  that  see. 
'You  know  that  you  'ave  earned  it,  lad, 

'So  you  must  follow  Me. 
'Follow  Me  on  by  the  paths  o'  pain, 

'Seeking  what  you  'ave  seen, 
'Until  at  last  you  can  build  the  "Is," 

'Wi'    the    bricks    o'    the    "Might    'ave 
been." ' 
That's  what  'E  said,  as  I'm  alive, 

And  that  there  dream  were  true. 
But  what  'E  meant,— ^I  don't  quite  know. 

Though  I  knows  what  I  'as  to  do. 
I's  got  to  follow  what  I's  seen, 

Till  this  old  carcase  dies. 
For  I  daren't  face  in  the  land  o'  grace. 

The  sorrow  ov  those  eyes. 

19 


There  ain't  no  throne,  and  there  ain't  no 
books, 

It's  'Im  you've  got  to  see, 
It's  'Im,  just  'Im,  that  is  the  Judge 

Of  blokes  like  you  and  me. 
And  boys,  I'd  sooner  frizzle  up, 

I'  the  flames  of  a  burning  'Ell, 
Than  stand  and  look  into  'Is  face, 

And  'ear  'Is  voice  say — 'Well?* 


20 


The  Sorrow  of  God 

A  Sermon  in  a  Billet 

YES,  I  used  to  believe  i'  Jesus  Christ 
And  I  used  to  go  to  Church, 
But  sin'  I  left  'ome  and  came  to  France, 

I've  been  clean  knocked  off  my  perch. 
For  it  seemed  orlright  at  'ome,  it  did, 

To  believe  in  a  God  above 
And  in  Jesus  Christ  'Is  only  Son 

What  died  on  the  Cross  through  Love. 
When  I  went  for  a  walk  of  a  Sunday  morn 

On  a  nice  fine  day  in  the  spring, 
I  could  see  the  proof  o'  the  living  God 

In  every  living  thing. 
For  'ow  could  the    grass    and    the    trees 
grow  up. 

All  along  o'  their  bloomin*  selves? 
Ye  might  as  well  believe  i'  the  fairy  tales 

And  think  they  was  made  by  elves. 
So  I  thought  as  that  long  'aired  atheist 

Were  nubbat  a  silly  sod. 

21 


For    'ow    did    e'    'count    for    my    brussels 
sprouts 

I£  'e  didn't  believe  i'  God. 
But  it  ain't  the  same  out  'ere,  ye  know. 

It's  as  different  as  chalk  fro'  cheese, 
For  'arf  of  it's  blood  and  t'other  'arf 's  mud, 

And  I'm  damned  if  I  really  sees 
'Ow  the  God,  who  'as  made  such  a  cruel 
world, 

Can  'ave  Love  in  'Is  'eart  for  men, 
And  be  deaf  to  the  cries  of  the  men  as  dies 

And  never  comes  'ome  again. 
Just  look  at  that  little  boy  corporal  there, 

Such  a  fine  upstanding  lad, 
Wi'  a  will  ov  'is  own  and  a  way  ov  'is  own. 

And  a  smile  ov  'is  own,  'e  'ad. 
An  hour  ago  he  was  bustin'  wi'  life, 

Wi'  'is  actin'  and  foolin'  and  fun; 
'E  were  simply  the  life  on  us  all,  'e  were. 

Now  look  what  the  blighters  'a  done. 
Look  at  'im  lyin'  there  all  ov  a  'eap, 

Wi'  the  blood  soaken  over  'is  'ead. 
Like  a  beautiful  picture  spoiled  by  a  fool, 

A  bundle  o'  nothin' — dead. 


22 


And  it  ain't  only  'im — there's  a  mother  at 
'ome, 

And  'e  were  the  pride  o£  'er  life. 
For   it's  women  as   pays    in    a    thousand 
ways 

For  the  madness  o'  this  'ere  strife. 
And  the  lovin'  God  'E  looks  down  on  it  all, 

On  the  blood  and  the  mud  and  the  smell. 
O  God,  if  it's  true,  'ow  I  pities  You, 

For  Ye  must  be  livin'  i'  'ell. 
You  must  be  livin'  i'  'ell  all  day. 

And  livin'  i'  'ell  all  night. 
I'd  rather  be  dead,  wi'  a  'ole  through  my 
'ead, 

I  would,  by  a  dam  long  sight, 
Than  be  livin'  wi'  You  on  Your  'eavenly 
throne, 

Lookin'  down  on  yon  bloody  'eap 
That  were  once  a  boy  full  o'  life  and  joy. 

And  'earin'  'is  mother  weep. 
The  sorrows  o'  God  mun  be  'ard  to  bear 

If  'E  really  'as  Love  in  'Is  'eart. 
And  the  'ardest  part  i'  the  world  to  play 

Mun  surely  be  God's  part. 


23 


And  I  wonder  if  that's  what  it  really  means, 

That  Figure  what  'angs  on  the  Cross. 
I  remember  I  seed  one  t'other  day 

As  I  stood  wi'  the  captain's  'oss. 
I  remember,  I  thinks,  think  I  to  mysel', 

It's  a  long  time  since  'E  died, 
Yet  the  world    don't    seem    much    better 
to-day 

Then  when  'E  were  crucified. 
It's  alius  the  same,  as  it  seems  to  me, 

The  weakest  mun  go  to  the  wall. 
And  whether  'e's    right    or    whether    'e's 
wrong. 

It  don't  seem  to  matter  at  all. 
The  better  ye  are  and  the  'arder  it  is. 

The  'arder  ye  'ave  to  fight. 
It's  a  cruel  'ard  world  for  any  bloke 

What  does  the  thing  as  is  right. 
And  that's  'ow  'E  came  to  be  crucified. 

For  that's  what  'E  tried  to  do. 
'E  were  alius  a  tryin'  to  do  'Is  best 

For  the  likes  o'  me  and  you. 
Well,  what  if  'E  came  to  the  earth  to-day. 

Came  walkin'  about  this  trench. 


24 


'Ow  'Is  'eart  would  bleed  for  the  sights  'E 
seed, 

I'  the  mud  and  the  blood  and  the  stench. 
And  I  guess  it  would  finish  'Im  up  for  good 

When  'E  came  to  this  old  sap  end, 
And  'E  seed  that  bundle  o'  nothin'  there, 

For  'E  wept  at  the  grave  ov  'Is  friend. 
And  they  say  'E  were  just  the  image  o' 
God. 

I  wonder  if  God  sheds  tears, 
I  wonder  if  God  can  be  sorrowin'  still 

And  'as  been  all  these  years. 
I  wonder  if  that's  what  it  really  means, 

Not  only  that  'E  once  died. 
Not  only  that  'E  came  once  to  the  earth 

And  wept  and  were  crucified? 
Not  just  that  'E  suffered  once  for  all 

To  save  us  from  our  sins. 
And  then  went  up  to  'Is  throne  on  'igh 

To  wait  till  'Is  'eaven  begins. 
But  what  if  'E  came  to  the  earth  to  show. 

By  the  paths  o'  pain  that  'E  trod. 
The  blistering  flame  of  eternal  shame 

That  burns  in  the  heart  o'  God? 


25 


O  God,  if  that's  'ow  it  really  is, 

Why,  bless  ye,  I  understands, 
And    I    feels    for   You   wi'    Your    thorn- 
crowned  'ead 

And  Your  ever  pierced  'ands. 
But  why  don't  Ye  bust  the  show  to  bits 

And  force  us  to  do  your  will? 
Why  ever  should  God  be  suffering  so 

And  man  be  sinning  still? 
Why   don't   You  make   Your    voice    ring 
out 

And  drown  these  cursed  guns? 
Why  don't  Ye  stand  with  an  outstretched 
hand. 

Out  there  'twixt  us  and  the  'Uns? 
Why  don't  Ye  force  us  to  end  the  war 

And  fix  up  a  lasting  peace? 
Why  don't  Ye  will  that  the  world  be  still 

And  wars  for  ever  cease? 
That's  what  I'd  do,  if  I  was  You, 

And  I  had  a  lot  of  sons 
What  squabbled    and    fought    and    spoilt 
their  'ome 

Same  as  us  boys  and  the  'Uns. 


26 


And  yet,  I  remember,  a  lad  o'  mine, 

'E's  fightin'  now  on  the  sea. 
And  'e  were  a  thorn  in  'is  mother's  side 

And  the  pl^igue  o'  my  life  to  me. 
Lord,  'ow  I  used  to  swish  that  lad 

Till  'e  fairly  yelped  wi'  pain, 
But  fast  as  I  thrashed  one  devil  out 

Another  popped  in  again. 
And  at  last,  when  'e  grew  up  a  strappin' 
lad, 

'E  ups  and  'e  says  to  me, 
'My  will's  my  own  and  my  life's  my  own. 

And  I'm  goin',  Dad,  to  sea.' 
And  'e  went,  for  I  'adn't  broke  'is  will. 

Though  Gawd  knows  'ow  I  tried. 
And  'e  never  set  eyes  on  my  face  again 

Till  the  day  as  'is  mother  died. 
Well,  maybe,  that's  'ow  it  is  wi'  God, 

'Is  sons  'ave  got  to  be  free; 
Their  wills  are  their  own,  and  their  lives 
their  own. 

And  that's  'ow  it  'as  to  be. 
So  the  Father  God  goes  sorrowing  still 

For  'Is  world  what  'as  gone  to  sea, 


27 


But  'E  runs  up  a  light  on  Calvary's  4ght 

That  beckons  to  you  and  me. 
The  beacon  light  of  the  sorrow  of  God 

'As  been  shinin'  down  the  years, 
A  flashin'  its   light  through    the    darkest 
night 

Of  our  'uman  blood  and  tears. 
There's  a  sight  o'  things  what    I    thought 
was  strange, 

As  I'm  just  beginnin'  to  see. 
'Inasmuch  as  ye  did  it  to  one  of  these 

Ye  'ave  done  it  unto  me.' 
So  it  isn't  just  only  the  crown  o'  thorns 

What  'as  pierced  and  torn  God's  'ead; 
'E  knows  the  feel  ov  a  bullet,  too, 

And  'E's  'ad  'Is  touch  o'  the  lead. 
And  'E's  standin'  wi'  me  in  this  'ere  sap, 

And  the  corporal  stands  wiv  'Im, 
And  the  eyes  of  the  laddie  is  shinin'  bright. 

But  the  eyes  of  the  Christ  burn  dim. 

0  laddie,  I  thought  as  ye'd  done  for  me 
And  broke  my  'eart  wi'  your  pain. 

1  thought  as  ye'd  taught  me  that  God  were 

dead. 
But  ye've  brought  'Im  to  life  again. 

28 


And  yeVe  taught  me  more  of  what  God  is 

Than  I  ever  thought  to  know, 
For  I  never  thought  'E  could  come  so  close 

Or  that  I-Could  love  'Im  so. 
For  the  voice  o£  the  Lord,  as  I  'ears  it  now, 

Is  the  voice  of  my  pals  what  bled. 
And  the  call  of  my  country's  God  to  me 

Is  the  call  of  my  country's  dead. 


29 


Sinner  and  Ssint 

A  Sermon  in  a  Billet 

OUR  Padre,  'e  says  I'm  a  sinner, 
And  John  Bull  says  I'm  a  saint, 
And    they're    both    of    'em    bound    to    be 
liars, 

For  I'm  neither  o£  them,  I  ain't. 
I'm  a  man,  and  a  man's  a  mixture, 

Right  down  from  'is  very  birth, 
For  part  ov  'im  comes  from  'eaven. 

And  part  ov  'im  comes  from  earth. 
There's  nothing  in  man  that's  perfect. 

And  nothing  that's  all  complete; 
E's  nubbat  a  big  beginning. 

From  'is  'ead  to  the  soles  of  'is  feet. 
There's  summat  as  draws  'im  uppards. 

And  summat  as  drags  'im  down, 
And  the  consekence  is,  'e  wobbles, 

'Twixt  muck  and  a  golden  crown. 
Ye  remember  old  Billy  Buggins, 

That  sargint  what  lorst  'is  stripes? 

30 


Well,  'e  were  a  bloomin'  'ero, 

A  daisy  to  scrap,  but  cripes! 
That  bloke  were  a  blinkin'  mixture. 

Of  all  that  were  good  and  bad. 
For  'e  fairly  broke  'is  mother's  'eart, 

The  best  friend  ever  'e  'ad. 
But  'e  died  at  Loos  to  save  a  pal, 

And  that  were  the  other  side; 
'E  killed  'is  mother  and  saved  'is  pal. 

That's  'ow  'e  lived  and  died. 
And  that's  'ow  it  is,  it's  'uman, 

It's  'eaven  and  'ell  in  one.  ^ 

There's  the  'ell  of  a  scrap  in  the  'eart  of  a 
man, 

And  that  scrap's  never  done. 
The  Good  and  the  Bad's  at  war,  ye  see, 

Same  as  us  boys  and  the  Boche, 
And  when  both  gets  goin'  with  all  their 
guns. 

There's  the  Saturday  night  of  a  squash. 
And  it's  just  the  same  wi'  the  nations. 

As  it  is  wi'  a  single  man. 
There's  'eaven  and  'ell  in  their  vitals, 

A  scrappin'  as  'ard  as  they  can. 


31 


And  England,  she  'as  it  in  *er, 

Just  same  as  all  o'  the  rest, 
Old  England  same  as  us  Englishmen, 

A  mixture  o'  bad  and  best. 
And  that's  what    I    reckon    these    parsons 
mean 

Wi'  their  Mission  o'  'Pentance  and  'Ope, 
They  want  us  to  wash  old  England's  face 
clean, 

Wi'  the  grace  of  Gawd  for  soap. 
And  it  ain't  a  bad  stunt  neither. 

For  England  she  oughter  be  clean, 
For  the  sake  of  the  boys  what  'ave  fought 
and  died 

And  their  kiddies  as  might  'a'  been. 
We  can't  let  it  be  for  nothin' 

That  our  pals  'ave  fought  and  bled. 
So,  lads,  let's  look  to  this  washin'  up 

For  the  sake  o'  Christ — and  our  dead. 


32 


Prayer  Before  an  Attack 

IT  ain't  as  I  'opes  'E'll  keep  me  safe 
While  the  other  blokes  goes  down, 
It  ain't  as  I  wants  to  leave  this  world 

And  wear  an  'ero's  crown. 
It  ain't  for  that  as  I  says  my  prayers 

When  I  goes  to  the  attack, 
But  I  pray  that  whatever  comes  my  way 

I  may  never  turn  me  back. 
I  leaves  the  matter  o'  life  and  death 

To  the  Father  who  knows  what's  best, 
And  I  pray  that  I  still  may  play  the  man 

Whether  I  turns  east  or  west. 
I'd  sooner  that  it  were  east,  ye  know, 

To  Blighty  and  my  gal  Sue. 
I'd  sooner  be  there,  wi'  the  gold  in  'er  'air, 

And  the  skies  be'ind  all  blue. 
But  still  I  pray  I  may  do  my  bit, 

And  then,  if  I  must  turn  west, 
I'll  be  unashamed  when  my  name  is  named, 

And  I'll  find  a  soldier's  rest. 

33 


To-day  Thou  Shalt  be  with  Me 

GAWD!  'ow  it  shoots! 
From  my  'ead  to  my  boots ! 
And  back  to  my  'ead  again! 
You  never  can  tell, 
But  I  don't  think  'ell 
Can  be  worse  than  this  blarsted  pain. 

There's  'eaven  and  'ell, 

They  say  so, — Well 
I  dunnow  what  they  mean. 

But  it's  touch  and  go. 

And  I  may  soon  know, 
It's  funny  there's  nothin'  between. 

I've  drunk  and  I've  swore. 

And  the  girl  next  door. 
Is  a'  breakin'  'er  'eart  thro'  me. 

She's  a  bonny  lass. 

Gawd  damn  this  gas! 
I  wonder  just  where  I'll  be. 

34 


I  remembers  a  day, 

When  they  blazed  away, 
And  they  bust  up  a  church  to  bits: 

But  the  cross  still  stood, 

It  were  only  wood. 
This  pain — it's  givin'  me  fits. 

Aye,  there  it  stands. 

With  its  outstretched  hands. 
And  I  can't  'elp  wonderin'  why. 

I  can't  quite  see, 

Is  'E  lookin'  at  me? 
O  Gawd,  am  I  goin'  to  die! 

I  can't!     Not  yet! 

My  Gawd,  I  sweat! 
There's  a  mist  comin'  over  my  eyes. 

Christ  let  me  be, 

To-day  with  Thee. 
You  took  a  thief  to  Paradise ! 


35 


Thy  Will  Be   Done 

A  Sermon  in  a  Hospital 

1WERE  puzzled  about  this  prayin'  stunt, 
And  all  as  the  parsons  say, 
For  they  kep'  on  sayin',  and  sayin', 

And  yet  it  weren't  plain  no  way. 
For  they  told  us  never  to  worry, 

But  simply  to  trust  in  the  Lord, 
*Ask  and  ye  shall  receive,'  they  said, 

And  it  sounds  orlright,  but  Gawd! 
It's  a  mighty  puzzling  business, 

For  it  don't  alius  work  that  way, 
Ye    may    ask    like    mad,    and    ye     don't 
receive. 

As  I  found  out  t'other  day. 
I  were  sittin'  me  down  on  my  'unkers, 

And  'avin'  a  pull  at  my  pipe. 
And  larfin'  like  fun  at  a  blind  old  'Un, 

What  were  'avin  a  try  to  snipe. 
For  'e  couldn't  shoot  for  monkey  nuts, 

The  blinkin'  bleareyed  ass, 

36 


So  I  sits,  and  I  spits,  and  I  'urns  a  tune; 

And  I  never  thought  o'  the  gas. 
Then  all  of  a  suddint  I  jumps  to  my  feet, 

For  I  'eard  the  strombos  sound, 
And  I  pops  up  my  'ead  a    bit    over    the 
bags 

To  'ave  a  good  look  all  round. 
And  there  I  seed  it,  comin'  across, 

Like  a  girt  big  yaller  cloud. 
Then  I  'olds  my  breath,  i'  the  fear  o'  death, 

Till  I  bust,  then  I  prayed  aloud. 
I  prayed  to  the  Lord  Orlmighty  above. 

For  to  shift  that  blinkin'  wind. 
But  it  kep'  on  blowin'  the  same  'ole  way, 

And  the  chap  next  me,  'e  grinned. 
*It's     no     use     prayin','     'e     said,     'let's 
run,' 

And  we  fairly  took  to  our  'eels. 
But  the  gas  ran  faster  nor  we  could  run. 

And,  Gawd,  you  know  'ow  it  feels! 
Like  a  thousand  rats  and  a  million  chats, 

All  tearin'  away  at  your  chest. 
And  your  legs  won't  run,  and  you're  fairly 
done. 

And  you've  got  to  give  up  and  rest. 

37 


Then  the  darkness  comes,  and  ye  knows  no 
more 

Till  ye  wakes  in  an  'orspital  bed. 
And  some  never  knows    nothin'    more    at 
all, 

Like  my  pal  Bill — 'e's  dead. 
Now,    'bw    was    it    'E    didn't    shift    that 
wind. 

When  I  axed  in  the  name  o'  the  Lord? 
With  the  'orrer  of  death  in  every  breath, 

Still  I  prayed  every  breath  I  drawed. 
That  beat  me  clean,  and  I  thought  and  I 
thought 

Till  I  came  near  bustin*  my  'ead. 
It  weren't  for  me  I  were  grieved,  ye  see, 

It  were  my  pal  Bill — 'e's  dead. 
For  me,  I'm  a  single  man,  but  Bill 

'As  kiddies  at  'ome  and  a  wife. 
And  why  ever  the  Lord  didn't  shift  that 
wind 

I  just  couldn't  see  for  my  life. 
But  I've  just  bin  readin'  a  story  'ere, 

Of  the  night  afore  Jesus  died. 
And  of  'ow  'E  prayed  in  Gethsemane, 

'Ow  'E  fell  on  'Is  face  and  cried. 

38 


Cried  to  the  Lord  Orlmighty  above 

Till  'E  broke  in  a  bloody  sweat, 
And  'E  were  the  Son  o£  the  Lord,  'E  were. 

And  'E  prayed  to  'Im  'ard,  and  yet, 
And  yet  'E  'ad  to  go  through  wiv  it,  boys. 

Just  same  as  pore  Bill  what  died. 
'E  prayed  to  the  Lord,    and    'E    sweated 
blood. 

And  yet  'E  were  crucified. 

But  'Is  prayer  were  answered,  I    sees    it 
now, 
For  though  'E  were  sorely  tried. 
Still  'E  went  wiv  'Is  trust  in    the    Lord 
unbroke, 
And  'Is  soul  it  were  satisfied. 
For  'E  felt  'E  were  doin'  God's  Will,  ye  see. 

What  'E  came  on  the  earth  to  do. 
And  the  answer  what  came  to  the  prayers 
'E  prayed 
Was  'Is  power  to  see  it  through; 
To  see  it  through  to  the  bitter  end, 
And  to  die  like  a  God  at  the  last, 
In   a    glory    o£    light   that    were    dawning 
bright 
Wi'  the  sorrow  of  death  all  past. 

39 


And  the  Christ  who  was  'ung  on  the  Cross 
is  God, 

True  God  for  me  and  you, 
For  the  only  God  that  a  true  man  trusts 

Is  the  God  that  sees  it  through. 
And  Bill,  'e  were  doin'  'is  duty,  boys, 

What  'e  came  on  the  earth  to  do. 
And  the  answer  what  came  to  the  prayers 
I  prayed 

Was  'is  power  to  see  it  through. 
To  see  it  through  to  the  very  end, 

And  to  die  as  my  old  pal  died, 
Wi'  a  thought  for  'is  pal  and  a  prayer  for 
'is  gal. 

And  'is  brave  'eart  satisfied. 


40 


The  Secret 

V/OU  were  askin'  'ow  we  sticks  it, 
•■•       Sticks  this  blarsted  rain  and  mud, 
'Ow  it  is  we  keeps  on  smilin' 

When  the  place  runs  red  wi'  blood. 
Since  you're  askin',  I  can  tell  ye, 

And  I  thinks  I  tells  ye  true, 
But  it  ain't  official,  mind  ye, 

It's  a  tip  twixt  me  and  you. 
For  the  General  thinks  it's  tactics. 

And  the  bloomin'  plans  'e  makes. 
And  the  CO.  thinks  it's  trainin', 

And  the  trouble  as  'e  takes. 
Sergeant-Major  says  it's  drillin',  ' 

And  'is  straffin'  on  parade. 
Doctor  swears  it's  sanitation, 

And  some  patent  stinks  'e's  made. 
Padre  tells  us  its  religion, 

And  the  Spirit  of  the  Lord; 
But  I  ain't  got  much  religion. 

And  I  sticks  it  still,  by  Gawd. 

41 


Quarters  kids  us  it's  the  rations, 

And  the  dinners  as  we  gets. 
But  I  knows  what  keeps  us  smilin', 

It's  the  Woodbine  Cigarettes. 
For  the  daytime  seems  more  dreary, 

And  the  night-time  seems  to  drag 
To  eternity  o£  darkness, 

When  ye  'aven't  got  a  fag. 
Then  the  rain  seems  some'ow  wetter, 

And  the  cold  cuts  twice  as  keen, 
And  ye  keeps  on  seein'  Boches, 

What  the  Sargint  'asn't  seen. 
If  ole  Fritz  'as  been  and  got  ye, 

And  ye  'ave  to  stick  the  pain. 
If  ye  'aven't  got  a  fag  on. 

Why  it  'urts  as  bad  again. 
When  there  ain't  no  fags  to  pull  at. 

Then  there's  terror  in  the  ranks. 
That's  the  secret — (yes,  I'll  'ave  one) 

Just  a  fag — and  many  Tanks. 


42 


Christmas 

COME  sail  with  me, 
O'er  the  golden  sea, 
To  the  land  where  the  rainbow  ends. 

Where  the  rainbow  ends. 

And  the  great  earth  bends, 
To  the  weight  of  the  starry  sky. 

Where  tempests  die 

With  a  last  fierce  cry, 
And  never  a  wind  is  wild — 

There's  a  Mother  mild, 

With  a  little  child 
Like  a  star  set  on  her  knee. 

Then  bow  you  down. 

Give  Him  the  crown, 
'Tis  the  Lord  of  the  world  you  see. 


43 


War 

THERE'S  a  soul  in  the  Eternal, 
Standing  stiff  before  the  King. 
There's    a    little    English    maiden 

Sorrowing. 
There's  a  proud  and  tearless  woman, 
Seeing  pictures  in  the  fire. 
There's  a  broken  battered  body 
On  the  wire. 


44 


A  Scrap  of  Paper 

JUST  a  little  scrap  of  paper 
In  a  yellow  envelope, 
And  the  whole  world  is  a  ruin, 
Even  Hope. 


45 


A  Mother  Understands 

r^EAR  Lord,  I  hold  my  hand  to  take 
■L-^     Thy  Body,  broken  once  for  me, 
Accept  the  Sacrifice  I  make. 

My  Body,  broken,  Christ,  for  Thee. 

His  was  my  body,  born  of  me. 
Born  of  my  bitter  travail  pain, 

And  it  lies  broken  on  the  field. 
Swept  by  the  wind  and  the  rain. 

Surely  a  Mother  understands  Thy  thorn- 
crowned  head, 

The  mystery  of  Thy  pierced  hands — the 
Broken  Bread. 


46 


Her  Gift 

DEAD  black  against  a  blood  red  sky 
It  stands, 
With  outstretched  hands, 
The  Calvary. 
What  can  it  mean, 

Beyond  the  vain  recalling  o£  a  scene, 
A  shameful  scene  o£  centuries  ago? 
And  yet,  if  that  be  so, 

How  can  it  be, 

For  you  and  me, 
A  thing  of  any  worth  at  all? 
We've  seen  men  die, 
Not  once,  nor  twice,  but  many  times 

In  agony 
As  ghastly  to  behold  as  that. 
We've  seen  men  fall. 

And  rise,  and  staggering  onward  fall  again, 
Bedrenched  in  their  own  blood. 
Fast  flowing  like  a  flood. 
Of  crimson  sacrifice  upon  the  snow. 

47 


We've  seen,  and  would  forget. 

Why  then  should  there  be  set 

Before  our  eyes  these  monuments  of  crime? 

It's  time,  high  time, 

That  they  were  buried  in  the  past; 

There  let  them  lie, 

In  that  great  sea  of  merciful  oblivion. 

Where  our  vile  deeds. 

And  outworn  creeds, 

Are  left  to  rot  and  die. 

We  would  forget, 

And  yet, 
Do  you  remember  Rob  McNeil 

And  how  he  died. 

And  cried. 
And  pleaded  with  his  men 

To  take  that  gun, 

And  kill  the  Hun 

That  worked  it  dead? 

He  bled 
Horribly.     Do  you  remember? 
I  can't  forget, 
I  would  not  if  I  could, 
It  were  not  right  I  should, 

He  died  for  me. 

48 


He  was  a  God  that  Boy, 

The  only  God  I  could  adore. 

And  that  reminds  me  I  have  something  here 

He  wore 

He  gave  it  m.e  that  night 

But  because  my  heart  was  sore 

With  grief,  I  have  not  dared  to  look  at  it. 

But  here  it  is,  a  little  leather  case, 

A  picture,  may  be,  of  the  face 

That  smiled  upon  him  as  a  babe, 

All  wondering  bright. 

With  Mother  Light, 
Of  tenderest  pride  and  Love. 
The    face    that    oft    would    dimple    into 

laughter 
At  his  first  Baby  tricks. 
It  is  her  gift — but  look  at  it, 

A  little  silver  Crucifix. 


49 


Eternal  Hope 

CAN  the  Father  in  His  Justice  burn  in 
Everlasting  flame 
Souls  that  sunk  in  foulest  squalor  never 
knew  the  Father's  Name? 


Can    the    Love    o£    man    be    greater    than 

Eternal  Love  divine? 
Can  the  heart  of  God  be  harder  than  this 

hardened  heart  of  mine? 


Can  the  pangs  of  Hell  be  endless,  void  of 
object,  void  of  gain, 

Save  to  pay  for  years  of  sorrow  with  Eter- 
nity of  Pain? 

Cursed  be  the  foul  contortion,  that  hath 

turned  His  Love  to  Hate, 
That    hath    cried    at    death's    dim    portal, 

'Enter  here,  and  'tis  too  late,' 

50 


Cruel  pride  and  vain  presumption  claim  to 

grasp  where  angels  grope, 
'Tis    not    God    but    mean    man    blindness 

dims  the  deathless  star  of  Hope. 


51 


Patience 

SOMETIMES  I  wish  that  I  might  do 
Just  one  grand  deed  and  die, 
And  by  that  one  grand  deed  reach  up 

To  meet  God  in  the  sky. 
But  such  is  not  Thy  way,  O  God, 

Not  such  is  Thy  decree, 
But  deed  by  deed,  and  tear  by  tear, 

Our  souls  must  climb  to  Thee, 
As  climbed  the  only  Son  of  God 

From  manger  unto  Cross, 
Who  learned,  through  tears    and    bloody 
sweat, 
To  count  this  world  but  loss. 

Who  left  the  Virgin  Mother's  Arms 
To  seek  those  arms  of  shame. 

Outstretched  upon  the  lonely  hill 
To  which  the  darkness  came. 

As  deed  by  deed,  and  tear  by  tear. 
He  climbed  up  to  the  height, 

52 


Each  deed  a  splendid  deed,  each  tear 

A  Jewel  shining  bright, 
So  grant  us,  Lord,  the  patient  heart, 

To  climb  the  upward  way. 
Until  we  stand  upon  the  height, 

And  see  the  perfect  day. 


53 


Truth 

SUNSHINE  and  shadow, 
And  their  strife, 
Is  that  indeed  the  lot  in  life 
That  God  has  meted  to  the  sons  of  men? 
Through  yon  gold  mist. 
That  God  has  kissed, 
And    waked    to    greater    glory    than    the 

day, 
Is  that  the  way 

By  which  we  climb  up  to  the  final  place, 
And  see  God's  face 

Burn  through  the  shadows  at  the  last? 
It  has  been  so. 
That  much  we  know. 
That  is  the  very  message  of  man's  past, 
We  know  in  part. 
But  still  the  heart 
Of  very  Truth  seems  far  away. 
Time  turns  our  Truth  to  falsehood. 
And  a  brighter  day 

54 


Makes  evening  of  our  morning; 

And   round  us  once    again    the    shadows 

lie, 
And  hide  the  sun. 
Our  search  is  never  done. 
We  stumble  onward  toward  that  light, 
Too  bright 

For  us  to  see  unshadowed,  lest  we  die. 
O  God,  i£  that  be  life, 
To  take  this  strife. 
And  keep  it  up  unbeaten  to  the  end. 
Then,  God  of  mercy,  send 
One  ray 

Of  thine  own  glory  light 
To  touch  our  world  to-day. 
The  shadows  have  departed. 
And  black  night 

Lies  brooding  over  all  the  earth, 
And  hideous  things  find  birth. 
The  world  brings  forth  abortions, 
And  then  weeps  with  bloody  tears. 
Because  her  womb  is  shamed, 
Her  children  maimed, 
And  all  her  home  becomes  a  wilderness  of 

sin. 

55 


The  sun  is  darkened, 

And  the  moon  turned  into  blood 

And  down  upon  us  sweeps  a  flood 

Of  Lust  and  Cruelty. 
God  sleeps, 

Or  is  He  dead, 

And  all  that  we  have  read 

Of  His  great  Love  a  lie, 
That  must  be  buried  with  the  others 

In  the  past, 

The  last, — the  very  last. 
Sweet  lie  that  we  shall  ever  have, 
To  keep  us  from  despair,    which    is    the 

Truth, 
The  cruel  Truth? 
More  Light — More  Light, 
O  God  of  Life,  one  Breath 

Of  air 
Or  else  we  die. 
The  shadows  conquer 
And  we  lie  in  darkness, 
Darkness  of  despair 

Which  is  the  second  death. 


56 


But  look,  the  shadows  weaken, 
And  the  sun  beats  through. 
'Tis  True— God  lives— I  knew. 
I  think  I  always  knew! 


57 


Death 

OUT  from   its  haven   glides  the  white 
ship, 
Kisses  still  linger  warm  on  thy  lip. 
Follow  it,  follow  it,  sweet  April  eyes, 
Swift  in  the  distance  dim  vision  dies. 
Nearer  and  nearer  draws  the  dread  line. 
Bounding  the  heaven  Love  has  made  thine. 
Lo!  the  line  conquers,  dead  is  the  day, 
Sunshine  is  shadowed,  all  the  world  grey. 
Yet  to  thy  loved  one  there  is  no  line, 
Still  on  before  him,  splendid,  divine. 
Rolls  the  broad  ocean  out  to  the  West, 
Gleams  of  gold  glory  crest  upon  crest. 
Till  it  breaks  thunder  on  the  far  shore. 
Where  he  awaits  thee,  thine  evermore. 
So  when  thou  standest,  waiting  for  death. 
Watching  thy  dearest  draw  his  last  breath. 
Nearer  and  nearer  draws  the  dark  mist. 
Colder  than  kindness  lips  that  are  kissed. 

58 


Silent  he  leaves  thee  over  the  line, 
Night  shadows  o'er  thee,  still    the    stars 

shine. 
For  to  thy  dearest  there  is  no  death, 
Only  a  gentle  murmuring  breath, 
Wind  of  God  wafts  him  over  life's  sea. 
On  to  the  shores  of  Eternity. 


59 


Paradise 

WHEN  machine  guns  start  to  play 
At  the  ending  of  the  day, 
And  the  sun's  last  burning  ray 

Bleeds  and  dies. 
When  the  sable  warp  of  night 
Is  first  cleft  by  silver  light, 
With  its  sudden  curving  flight 

Of  surprise. 
It  is  then  that  England  calls 
From  its  cottages  and  halls. 
And  we  think  of  four  dear  walls 

And  her  eyes. 
When  the  children's  prayer  is  said, 
And  they  lie  tucked  up  in  bed. 
And  the  fire  is  burning  red, 

Paradise. 


60 


The  Spirit 

WHEN  there  ain't  no  gal  to  kiss  you, 
And  the  postman  seems  to  miss  you, 
And  the  fags  have  skipped  an  issue, 
Carry  on. 

When  ye've  got  an  empty  belly, 
And  the  bulley's  rotten  smelly. 
And  you're  shivering  like  a  jelly, 
Carry  on. 

When  the  Boche  has  done  your  chum  in. 
And  the  sergeant's  done  the  rum  in. 
And  there  ain't  no  rations  comin'. 
Carry  on. 

When  the  world  is  red  and  reeking, 
And  the  shrapnel  shells  are  shrieking, 
And  your  blood  is  slowly  leaking. 
Carry  on. 

6i 


When  the  broken  battered  trenches, 
Are  like  bloody  butchers'  benches, 
And  the  air  is  thick  with  stenches. 
Carry  on. 

Carry  on, 

Though  your  pals  are  pale  and  wan, 
And  the  hope  of  life  is  gone. 
Carry  on. 

For  to  do  more  than  you  can. 
Is  to  be  a  British  man. 
Not  a  rotten  "also  ran," 
Carry  on. 


62 


The  Suffering  God 

IF  He  could  speak,  that  victim  torn  and 
bleeding, 
Caught  in  His  pain  and  nailed  upon  the 
Cross, 
Has  He  to  give    the    comfort    souls    are 
needing? 
Could  He  destroy  the  bitterness  of  loss? 

Once  and  for  all  men  say  He    came    and 
bore  it, 
Once  and  for  all  set  up  His  throne  on 
high, 
Conquered  the  world  and  set  His  standard 
o*er  it. 
Dying  that  once  that  men  might  never 
die. 

Yet  men  are  dying,  dying  soul  and  body, 
Cursing  the  God  who  gave  to  them  their 
birth. 
Sick  of  the  world  with  all  its  sham  and 
shoddy. 
Sick  of  the  lies  that  darken  all  the  earth. 

63 


Peace  we  were  pledged,  yet  blood  is  ever 
flowing, 
Where  on  the  earth  has  Peace  been  ever 
found? 
Men  do  but  reap  the  harvest  of  their  sow- 
ing, 
Sadly  the  songs  of  human  reapers  sound. 

Sad  as  the  winds  that    sweep    across    the 
ocean. 

Telling  to  earth  the  sorrow  of  the  sea. 
Vain  is  my  strife,  just  empty  idle  motion. 

All  that  has  been  is  all  there  is  to  be. 

So  on  the  earth  the  time  waves  beat   in 
thunder. 
Bearing  wrecked  hopes  upon  their  heav- 
ing breasts. 
Bits  of  dead  dreams,  and  true  hearts  torn 
asunder, 
Flecked  with  red  foam  upon  their  crim- 
son crests. 

How  can  it  be  that  God  can  reign  in  glory. 
Calmly  content  with  what  His  Love  has 
done, 

64 


Reading   unmoved   the   piteous    shameful 
story, 
All  the  vile  deeds  men  do  beneath  the 
sun? 

Are  there  no  tears  in  the    heart    of    the 

Eternal? 

Is  there  no  pain  to  pierce  the  soul  of 

God? 

Then  must  He  be  a  fiend  of  Hell  infernal, 

Beating  the  earth  to  pieces  with  His  rod. 

Or  is  it  just  that  there  is  nought  behind 

it, 
Nothing    but     forces     purposeless     and 

blind? 
Is  the  last  thing,  if  mortal  man  could  find 

it, 
Only  a  power  wand'ring  as  the  wind? 

Father,  if  He,  the  Christ,  were  Thy  Re- 
vealer. 
Truly  the  First  Begotten  of  the  Lord, 

65 


Then   must   Thou   be    a    Suff'rer    and     a 
Healer, 
Pierced  to  the  heart  by  the  sorrow  of  the 
sword. 

Then  must  it  mean,  not  only    that    Thy 
sorrow 
Smote  Thee  that  once  upon  the  lonely 
tree, 
But    that    to-day,    to-night,     and     on     the 
morrow. 
Still  it  will  come,  O   Gallant    God,    to 
Thee. 

Red    with    His    blood    the    better    day    is 
dawning. 
Pierced  by  His  pain  the  storm  clouds  roll 
apart. 
Rings  o'er  the  earth  the  message  o£  the 
morning. 
Still  on  the  Cross  the  Saviour  bares  His 
heart. 

Passionately  fierce  the  voice  of  God  is 
pleading. 
Pleading  with  men  to  arm  them  for  the 
fight, 

66 


See  how  those  hands,  majestically  bleed- 
ing, 
Call    us    to    rout    the    armies     o£     the 
night. 

Not  to  the  work  o£  sordid  selfish  saving 
Of  our  own  souls  to  dwell  with  Him  on 
high. 
But  to  the  soldier's  splendid  selfless  brav- 
ing, 
Eager  to  fight  for  Righteousness  and  die. 

Peace  does  not  mean  the  end  of  all  our 
striving, 
Joy  does  not  mean  the  drying    of    our 
tears, 
Peace  is  the  power  that  comes    to    souls 
arriving, 
Up  to    the    light    where    God    Himself 
appears. 

Joy  is  the  wine  that  God  is  ever  pouring 
Into  the  hearts  of  those  who  strive  with 
Him, 

67 


Light'ning  their  eyes  to  vision  and  adoring, 
Strength'ning  their  arms  to  warfare  glad 
and  grim. 

So  would  I  live  and  not  in  idle  resting, 
Stupid  as  swine  that  wallow  in  the  mire. 

Fain  would  I  fight,  and  be  for  ever  breast- 
ing, 
Danger  and  death  for  ever  under  fire. 

Bread     of     Thy    Body    give    me    for    my 
fighting, 
Give  me  to  drink  Thy  sacred  Blood  for 
wine. 
While  there  are  wrongs  that  need  me  for 
the  righting. 
While   there   is    warfare    splendid    and 
divine. 

Give  me,  for  light,  the  sunshine  of  Thy 
sorrow. 
Give    me    for    shelter    shadow    of    Thy 
Cross, 
Give    me    to    share     the     glory     of     Thy 
morrow, 
Gone   from  my  heart  the  bitterness   of 
Loss. 

68 


Two  Worlds 

IN  the  valleys  down  below, 
Where  the  fairest  flowers  blow, 
And  the  brook  runs  babbling  nonsense  to 
the  sea, 
Underneath  the  shady  trees, 
We  two  sauntered  at  our  ease, 
Just  a  pleasant  little  world  for  you  and  me. 

Then  the  summons  of  the  Lord, 
Like  a  sudden  silver  sword. 

Came  and  cut  our  little  pleasant  world  in 
two, 
One  fierce  world  of  strife  and  hate, 
One  sad  world  where  women  wait. 

And  we  wander  far  apart,  dear,  I  and  you. 

And  it  may  be,  with  this  breath. 
There  will  come  the  call  of  death. 
And  will  put  another  world  twixt  you  and 
me. 

69 


You  will  stand  with  God  above, 
I  will  stand  twixt  pride  and  Love, 
Looking  out  through  mists  o£  sorrow  o'er 
the  sea. 

For  the  world  in  God  is  one. 
And  when  all  our  strife  is  done. 
There  will  dawn  the  perfect  world  for  you 
and  me. 
When  we  two  together  stand. 
Looking  upwards,  hand  in  hand, 
Where  the  fires  of  Love  have  burned  up 
ev'ry  sea. 


70 


English  Land  in  France 

IN  among  her  golden  cornfields, 
-■•    Where  the  blood-red  poppies  dance, 
In  a  thousand  sunny  valleys, 
There  is  English  land  in  France. 

What  our  fathers  failed  to  conquer 
By  the  weakness  of  the  sword, 

That  we  have  and  hold  for  ever 
By  the  power  of  the  Lord. 

All  that  endless  ancient  warfare 

Was  but  bitter  barren  loss. 
But  the  heart  of  France  was  conquered. 

When  we  marked  it  with  the  Cross. 

As  the  Holy  Virgin  Mother 

Held  the  Christ  Child  to  her  breast; 
So  France  holds  these  sunlit  gardens 

Where  the  Sons  of  England  rest. 


71 


Looking  down,  with  eyes  o£  wonder, 
On  that  tiny  pledge  of  Peace, 

Dreaming   dreams   of   dawning   splendour, 
When  the  curse  of  War  shall  cease. 


72 


His  Mate 

THERE'S  a  broken  battered  village 
Somewhere  up  behind  the  line, 
There's  a  dug-out  and  a  bunk  there, 
That  I  used  to  say  were  mine. 

I  remember  how  I  reached  them, 
Dripping  wet  and  all  forlorn, 

In  the  dim  and  dreary  twilight 
Of  a  weeping  summer  dawn. 

All  that  week  I'd  buried  brothers, 

In  one  bitter  battle  slain, 
In  one  grave  I  laid  two  hundred. 

God !    What  sorrow  and  what  rain ! 

And  that  night  I'd  been  in  trenches, 
Seeking  out  the  sodden  dead, 

And  just  dropping  them  in  shell  holes, 
With  a  service  swiftly  said. 

73 


For  the  bullets  rattled  round  me, 
But  I  couldn't  leave  them  there, 

Water-soaked  in  flooded  shell  holes. 
Reft  o£  common  Christian  prayer. 

So  I  crawled  round  on  my  belly. 
And  I  listened  to  the  roar 

Of  the  guns  that  hammered  Thiepval, 
Like  big  breakers  on  the  shore. 

Then  there  spoke  a  dripping  sergeant, 
When  the  time  was  growing  late, 

'Would  you  please  to  bury  this  one, 
'Cause  'e  used  to  be  my  mate?' 

So  we  groped  our  way  in  darkness 

To  a  body  lying  there. 
Just  a  blacker  lump  of  blackness. 

With  a  red  blotch  on  his  hair. 

Though  we  turned  him  gently  over, 
Yet  I  still  can  hear  the  thud. 

As  the  body  fell  face  forward. 
And  then  settled  in  the  mud. 

74 


We  went  down  upon  our  faces, 
And   I   said  the  service  through, 

From  'I  am  the  Resurrection* 
To  the  last,  the  great  *adieu.' 

We  stood  up  to  give  the  Blessing, 
And  commend  him  to  the  Lord, 

When  a  sudden  light  shot  soaring 
Silver  swift  and  like  a  sword. 

At  a  stroke  it  slew  the  darkness, 
Flashed  its  glory  on  the  mud, 

And  I  saw  the  sergeant  staring 
At  a  crimson  clot  of  blood. 

There  are  many  kinds  of  sorrow 
In  this  world  of  Love  and  Hate, 

But  there  is  no  sterner  sorrow 
Than  a  soldier's  for  his  mate. 


75 


April 


BREATH  o£  Spring, 
Not  come,  but  coming, 
In  the  air. 

Life  of  earth,  not  lived 
But  living, 
Everywhere. 
Promises,  not  made, 
Nor  broken, 
But  the  token 

Of  promises  that  will  be  made. 
Sunshine  seeking  shade. 
Red  earth,  that  smiles. 
And  asks  for  seed. 

And  mossy  woodland  paths,  that  lead 
To  where  the  yellow  primrose  grows. 
And  so  for  many  coloured  miles 
Of  open  smiling  France, 
While  noisy  little  streaimlets  dance, 
In  diamond  mirrored  suns, 

76 


To  meet  the  stately    Mother    stream    that 

flows, 
With  shining  dignity, 
To  greet  her  Lord  the  sea, 
And  far  away,  beyond  the  hills,  one  hears, 
Poor  village  Mother,  hence  thy  tears. 
The  muffled  thunder  of  the  guns. 


77 


"The  Ending  of  the  Day" 

TOIL  is  over, 
Scent  of  clover, 
Gleams  with  gold  the  western  way. 
Farewell  sorrow, 
Till  to-morrow, 
'Tis  the  ending  of  the  day. 

Shyly,  sweetly. 

So  discreetly. 
Trips  she  down  the  lovers'  way. 

Darling  this  is 

Time  for  kisses, 
'Tis  the  ending  of  the  day. 

Silvery  moonshine. 

All  the  world  mine. 
Drink  we  Love's  wine  while  we  may. 

Time  is  flying. 

Leaves  are  dying, 
'Tis  the  ending  of  the  day. 

78 


Love  is  sweetest, 

Frailest,  fleetest. 
Of  the  joys  that  will  not  stay; 

Kisses  deeper 

Cannot  keep  her, 
'Tis  the  ending  of  the  day. 

Life  is  over, 

Dead  the  clover, 
All  the  world  is  growing  grey. 

Barren  blisses. 

Colder  kisses, 
'Tis  the  ending  of  the  day. 


79 


What's  the  Good  ? 

WELL,  I've  done  my  bit  o'  scrappin', 
And  I've  done  in  quite  a  lot; 
Nicked  'em  neatly  wiv  my  bayonet, 

So  I  needn't  waste  a  shot. 
'Twas  my  duty,  and  I  done  it, 

But  I  'opes  the  doctor's  quick, 
For  I  wish  I  'adn't  done  it, 

Gawd !  it  turns  me  shamed  and  sick. 

There's  a  young  'un  like  our  Richard, 

And  I  bashed  'is  'ead  in  two, 
And  there's  that  ole  grey  'aired  geezer 

Which  I  stuck  'is  belly  through. 
Gawd,  you  women,  wives  and  mothers, 

It's  sich  waste  of  all  your  pain. 
If  you  knowed  what  I'd  been  doin', 

Could  yer  kiss  me  still,  my  Jane? 

80 


When  I  sets  me  dahn  to  tell  yer 

What  it  means  to  scrap  and  fight 
Could  I  tell  ye  true  and  honest, 

Make  ye  see  this  bleedin'  sight? 
No,  I  couldn't  and  I  wouldn't. 

It  would  turn  your  'air  all  grey. 
Women  suffers  'ell  to  bear  us. 

And  we  suffers  'ell  to  slay. 
I  suppose  some  Fritz  went  courtin' 

In  the  gloamin'  same  as  me, 
And  the  old  world  turned  to  'eaven 

When  they  kissed  beneath  a  tree. 
And  each  evening  seemed  more  golden. 

Till  the  day  as  they  was  wed. 
And  'is  bride  stood  shy  and  blushin'. 

Like  a  June  rose,  soft  and  red. 
I  remembers  'ow  it  were,  lass, 

On  that  silver  night  in  May, 
When  ye  'ung  your  'ead  and  whispered 

That  ye  couldn't  say  me  nay. 
Then,  when  June  brought  in  the  roses 

And  you  changed  your  maiden  name, 
'Ow  ye  stood  there,  shy  and  blushin', 

When  the  call  of  evening  came. 


8i 


I  remembers  'ow  I  loved  ye, 

When  ye  arsked  me  in  your  pride 
'Ow  I'd  liked  my  Sunday  dinner 

As  ye  nestled  at  my  side. 
For  between  a  thousand  races 

Lands  may  stretch  and  seas  may  foam, 
But  it  makes  no  bloomin'  difference, 

Boche  or  Briton,  'ome  is  'ome. 
I  remember  what  'e  cost  ye. 

When  I  gave  ye  up  for  dead. 
As  I  'eld  your  'and  and  watched  ye 

With  the  little  lad  in  bed. 

'StTuth  I  wish  'e'd  stop  'is  lookin\ 

And  shut  up  'is  bloomin*  eyes. 
'Cause  I  keeps  on  seein'  Richard 

When  I  whacks  'im  and  'e  cries. 
Damn  the  blasted  war  to  'ell,  lass. 

It's  just  bloody  rotten  waste. 
Them  as  gas  on  war  and  glory 

Oughter  come  and  'ave  a  taste. 
Yes,  I  larned  what  women  suffers 

When  I  seed  you  stand  the  test, 
But  you  knowed  as  it  were  worth  it 

When  'e  felt  to  find  your  breast. 

82 


All  your  pain  were  clean  forgotten 
When  you  touched  'is  little  'ead, 
And  ye  sat  up  proud  and  smilin', 

With  a  living  lad  in  bed. 
But  we  suffers,  too — we  suffers, 

Like  the  damned  as  groans  in  'ell, 
And  we  'aven't  got  no  Babies, 

Only  mud,  and  blood,  and  smell. 
'Tain't  the  suff'rin'  as  I  grouse  at, 

I  can  stick  my  bit  o'  pain; 
But  I  keeps  on  alius  askin' 

What's  the  good  and  who's  to  gain? 
When  ye've  got  "a  plain  objective" 

Ye  can  fight  your  fight  and  grin, 
But  there  ain't  no  damned  objective. 

And  there  ain't  no  prize  to  win. 
We're  just  like  a  lot  o'  bullocks 

In  a  blarsted  china  shop, 
Bustin'  all  the  world  to  blazes, 
'Cause  we  dunno  'ow  to  stop. 
Trampling  years  o£  work  and  wonder 

Into  dust  beneath  our  feet, 
And  the  one  as  does  most  damage 
Swears  that  victory  is  sweet. 


83 


It's  a  sweet  as  turns  to  bitter, 

Like  the  bitterness  of  gall, 
And  the  winner  knows  'e's  losin* 

If  'e  stops  to  think  at  all. 
I  suppose  this  ain't  the  spirit 

Of  the  Patriotic  man. 
Didn't  ought  to  do  no  thinkin'. 

Soldiers  just  kill  all  they  can. 
But  we  carn't  'elp  thinkin'  sometimes, 

Though  our  business  is  to  kill. 
War  'as  turned  us  into  butchers. 

But  we're  only  'uman  still. 
Gawd  knows  well  I  ain't  no  thinker. 

And  I  never  knew  before, 
But  I  knows  now  why  I'm  fightin'. 

It's  to  put  an  end  to  war. 
Not  to  make  my  country  richer 

Or  to  keep  her  flag  unfurled, 
Over  every  other  nation 

Tyrant  mistress  of  the  world. 
Not  to  boast  of  Britain's  glory. 

Bought  by  bloodshed  in  her  wars. 
But  that  Peace  may  shine  about  her. 

As  the  sea  shines  round  her  shores. 


84 


If  ole  Fritz  believes  in  fightin', 

And  obeys  'is  War  Lord's  will, 
Well,  until  'e  stops  believin'. 

It's  my  job  to  fight  and  kill. 
But  the  Briton  ain't  no  butcher, 

'E's  a  peaceful  cove  at  'eart. 
And  it's  only  'cause  'e  'as  to, 

That  'e  plays  the  butcher's  part. 
'Cause  I  'as  to — that's  the  reason 

Why  I  done  the  likes  o'  this. 
You're  an  understanding  woman. 

And  you  won't  refuse  your  kiss. 
Women  pity  soldiers'  sorrow, 

That  can  bring  no  son  to  birth, 
Only  death  and  devastation. 

Darkness  over  all  the  earth. 
We  won't  'ave  no  babe  to  cuddle. 

Like  a  blessing  to  the  breast. 
We'll  just  'ave  a  bloody  mem'ry 

To  disturb  us  when  we  rest. 
But  the  kids  will  someday  bless  us. 

When  they  grows  up  British  men, 
'Cause  we  tamed  the  Prussian  tyrant, 

And  brought  Peace  to  earth  again. 


85 


Right  is  Might 

AH  yes,  I  know  full  well,  this  is, 
It  has  to  be,  the  end  o£  things. 
But  would  to  God  it  were  not  so, 
And  we  could  live  eternally, 
As  we  lived  that  one  last  moment, 
When  you  lay  within  my  arms. 
I  never  lived  before,  dear  heart. 
But  that,  alas!  can  never  be. 
It  must  be  just  a  golden  flash. 
Like  blooms  that  for  a  day  adorn 
The  many  splendoured  garb  of  God. 
Then  fading,  fall  to  rot  and  die. 
Returning,  like  poor  ravished  maids 
To  Mother  earth,  so  coldly  kind. 
So  must  this  moment  of  our  lives. 
Wherein  their  meaning  has  found  bloom. 
Be  swallowed  in  that  waste  of  years. 
In  which  we  do  not  live,  but  drift. 
Drift  outward  with  the  tide  of  time. 
To  that  dark  land  which  no  man  knows. 

86 


It  must  be  so.     But  why,  dear,  why? 
Why  should  we  not  make  permanent 
That  paradisic  moment  of  the  past? 
One  movement,  just  a  sign  from  you. 
And  once  again  our  paradise 
Would  fold  us  both  in  such  embrace 
Of  purest  bliss,  that  conscience  care 
Could  not  pierce  through  to  wound  and 

maim. 
Why  then  should  we  stand  thus,  ashamed. 
With  frightened  eyes,  like  children  caught 
In  some  too  sweet  forbidden  play? 
Co^e,    child,   be    brave,    and    take   what's 

yours 
For  less  than  asking.    Raise  your  eyes. 
One  glance  from  them  and  heaven's  ours. 
What,  downcast  still?     A  miracle. 
What  is  there  stands  twixt  you  and  me? 
What  can  there  be  so  strong,  that  it 
Avails  to  keep  those  eyes  downcast, 
Wherein  I  saw,  a  moment  back, 
The  lamps  of  love  gleam  passionate? 
*  'Tis    God,'    you    say.      Then    cursed    be 

God 
Who  blights  the  beauty  that  I  saw, 

87 


As  though  in  this  drab  dreary  world, 
Such  beauty  were  a  common  thing, 
And  human  souls  were  not  half  starved 
And  stunted  by  the  lack  of  that, 
Which  gleamed  in  glory  from  your  eyes. 
Curse  God  who  makes  the  Lily  die, 
And  rapes  its  beauty  from  the  rose. 
Who  bids  the  sunset  flame  and  fade, 
And  overburdens  life  with  death. 
Who  gives  our  hearts  enough  to  make 
Us  long  for  more,  then  takes  away 
The  little  that  we  have.    Who  turns 
Our  sweetest  passions  into  pains. 
And  will  not  give  us  even  Peace, 
Not  even  Peace  in  death,  for  we 
Are  tortured  by  our  dream  that  death 
Is  dawn  of  immortality. 
These  endless  ever  ending  joys. 
Whose  aching  beauty  contradicts 
The  desperate  hope  of  death  they  teach, 
Still  lure  us  on  into  the  midst. 
Where  Truth  abides.    If  Truth  there  be. 
I  know.    'Tis  madness.    Wind  and  words. 
A  sod  defies  its  God.    Poor  fool! 
I  do  but  hurl  myself,  my  soul, 

88 


In  futile  fury  'gainst  a  wall 
Immovable,  not  built  with  hands. 
There  must  be  Truth,  since  you  are  True. 
This  beauty  dies  at  birth  because 
It  is  not  Right.     O  Power  of  Right, 
That  Thou  should'st  meet  and  conquer 

might, 
Is  but  a  little  thing;  Thy  strength 
Is  only  fully  shown,  when  Thou 
Dost  meet  and  conquer  Love  like  mine. 
Farewell,  sweet  soul  of  mine,  farewell. 


89 


Judgment 


There  is  Mercy  with  Thee,  therefore  shalt  Thou 
be  feared. 

I   SAW  no  thronged  angelic  court,  I  saw 
no  great  white  throne, 
I  saw  no  open  Judgment  books,  I  seemed 

to  stand  alone. 
I  seemed  to  stand  alone  beside  a  solemn 

sounding  sea. 
While,  at  my  feet  upon  the  shore,  broke 

waves  of  memory. 
Their  murmuring  music  sobbed  and  sought 

a  way  into  my  soul. 
The  perfect  past  was  present  there,  and  I 

could  see  it  whole. 
Its  beauty  and  its  ugliness,  its  sorrow  and 

its  sin, 
Its  splendour  and  its  sordidness,  as  wave 

on  wave  rolled  in. 
And  ever  deeper  pierced  the  pain  of  all  that 

I  had  lost, 

90 


My  dear  dead  dreams  o£  perfect  things,  I 
saw  them  tempest-tossed. 

They  fell  like  wreckage  at  my  feet,  and,  as 

I  turned  them  o'er, 
The  solemn  waves,  in  Memory's  caves,  kept 

booming  'Nevermore!' 

There  came  one  dream,  more  dear  than  all, 

a  corpse  without  a  head. 
The  flying  spray  hissed  cowardice,  and  it 

was  dead,  cold  dead. 

Then  suddenly  a  shadow  fell,  and  I  was  not 

alone, 
He   stood   with  me   beside   the    sea,    and 

listened    to    its   moan. 

I  did  not  dare  to  raise  my  eyes,  I  feared 

what   I   might   see, 
A  cold  sweat  broke  and  bathed  my  brow,  I 

longed  to  turn  and  flee. 
But  could  not;   rooted  there   I  stood,   in 

shiv'ring  shame  and  fear. 
The  subtle  shadow    substance    took,    and 

nearer  came,  and  near. 

O  was  it  days  or  was  it  years,  we  stood 
beside  that  sea, 

91 


Or  was  it  aeons,  timeless  times?  It  seemed 
eternity. 

At  last,  compelled,  I  raised  my  eyes.    Two 

eyes  looked  into  mine,  *'' 
And  shattered  all  my  soul  with  shame,  so 

sad  and  so  divine. 
It  palsied  all  my  pride  with  pain,  the  terror 

of  those  tears. 
And  wrought  into  my  soul  the  woe  o£  all 
.  my  wasted  years. 

Depart  from  me,  I  cried,  depart,  I  cannot 

stand  with  Thee 
And  face  the  sorrow  of  those  eyes,  beside 

this  cruel  sea. 

Depart  from  me,  I  dare  not  tread  the  sands 

those  feet  have  trod. 
Nor  look  into  those  eyes  that  tell  the  agony 

of  God. 

For  there  is  written  all  the  tale  of  my  soul's 
trait'rous  tryst. 

The  sordidness  of  sin  that  seared  the  splen- 
did eyes  of  Christ. 

Depart,  I  cried,  and  He  was  gone.  I  stood 
there  all  alone, 

92 


In  silence  save    that    Memory's    sea    still 

made  perpetual  moan. 
Night  shadowed  all,  and  wandering  winds 

came  wailing  from  afar, 
But  out  across  the    darkening    sea    shone 

forth  one  single  star. 


93 


Wait 

SILVER  clouds  and  a  flying  moon, 
Wail,  ye  winds,  to  the  reapers*  tune 
For  the  dead  white  face  upturned. 
Two  grey  eyes,  all  dim  with  tears, 
Bleak,  how  bleak  are  the  barren  years. 

When  the  fires  of  love  are  burned. 
Two  brave  souls,  and  the  great  white  King. 
The  end  and  the  aim  of  everything 
Is  the  Peace  of  God  well  earned. 


94 


o 


Trees 

jNCE  glistering  green, 
With  dewy  sheen, 
And  summer  glory  round  them  cast. 
Now  black  and  bare, 
The  trees  stand  there, 
And  mourn  their  beauty  that  is  past. 

Look,  leaf  by  leaf. 

Each  leaf  a  grief. 
The  hand  of  Autumn  strips  them  bare. 

No  sound  nor  cry. 

As  they  fall  and  die, 
Because  they  know  that  Life  is  there. 

So  stiff  and  strong, 

The  winter  long, 
All  uncomplaining  stand  the  trees. 

God  make  my  life, 

Through  all  its  strife. 
As  true  to  Spring  as  one  of  these. 

95 


So  would  I  stand, 

Serene  and  grand, 
While  age  strips  off  the  joys  of  youth. 

Because  I  know 

That,  as  they  go, 
My  soul  draws  nearer  to  the  Truth. 

He  is  the  Truth, 

In  very  sooth, 
The  Word  made  flesh,  who  dwelt  with  men. 

And  the  world  shall  ring 

With  the  song  of  Spring, 
When  thy  soul  turns  to  its  Lord  again. 

When  God's  soft  breath. 

That  men  call  death. 
Falls  gently  on  thy  closing  eyes. 

Thy  youth,  that  goes 

Like  the  red  June  rose. 
Shall  burst  to  bloom  in  Paradise. 


96 


What  are  We  Fighting  for? 

By  An  Irishman 

SURE  we're  off  to  see  the  Kaiser, 
Just  to  make  him  somewhat  wiser, 
And  to  tell  him  what  we  think  of  sich  as  he. 
For  he's  clane  outrageous  barmy, 
And  we'll  give  him  British  Army, 
When  we've  made  a  way  to  Berlin-on-the- 
Spree. 

And  we're  afther  little  Willie, 
Just  to  show  him  that  he's  silly, 
And  to  give  him  some  respect  for  sich  as 
we. 
For  he's  off  his  onion  too. 
And  he'll  find  it's  all  napoo. 
When  we've  made  a  way  to  Berlin-on-the- 
Spree. 

'Tis  thase  Huns  have  nasty  habits, 
And  they  brade  loike  bunny  rabbits, 
They're  as  plentiful  as  fishes  in  the  sea. 

97 


They're  a  European  pest, 
To  the  lot  of  'em  bad  cest, 
We've  got  to  get  to  Berlin-on-the-Spree. 


'Tisn't  only  that  we  hate  'em, 
But  we've  got  to  up  and  bate  'em, 

'Cause  we  want  to  set  the  whole  world  free 
From  the  Kaiser  and  his  Krupps, 
And  his  brade  o'  Prussian  Pups, 

So  we've  got  to  get  to  Berlin-on-the-Spree. 

Little  Mick  O'Brien's  sisther, 
Oi  remimber  when  Oi  kissed  her, 

Says  that  Oireland  is  as  restless  as  can  be; 
Sure  the  boys  beyant  Killarney 
Would  have  had  a  bether  barney 

If  they'd  come  wid    us    to    Berlin-on-the- 
Spree. 

When  ye've  got  no  dacint  foight, 
Thin  it's  only  just  and  roight, 
Puttin'  up  a  proivate  scrap    for    two    or 
three ; 

98 


But  wid  millions  on  the  go, 
.    Proivate  scrappin'  is  no  go, 
We've  got  to  get  to  Berlin-on-the-Spree. 

So  we're  prayin'  for  the  kiddies, 
And  to  comfort  all  the  widdies, 

And  to  give  a  thought  just  now  and  then  to 
we; 
And  we're  straffin'  hell  for  leather, 
Wid'  the  divil  in  the  weather, 

For  to  make  a  way  to  Berlin-on-the-Spree. 

Whin  ye  come  to  tell  the  story 
Of  thase  days  of  blood  and  glory. 

Will  ye  find  a  little  place  for  sich  as  we? 
Will  their  blood  blot  out  the  shame 
That  has  stained  the  Oirish  name. 

Who  have  doied  to  get  to  Berlin-on-the- 
Spree. 


99 


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