Skip to main content

Full text of "The young guard"

See other formats


PR 
6016 


THE 


E.W.  HORNUNG 


THE  LIBRARY 

OF 

THE  UNIVERSITY 
OF  CALIFORNIA 

LOS  ANGELES 


THE   YOUNG   GUARD 


THE   YOUNG  GUARD 


BY 


E.  W.  HORNUNG 

AUTHOR  OF 
'NOTES  OP  A  CAMP-FOLLOWER  ON  THE  WESTERN  FRONT' 


LONDON 
CONSTABLE  AND  COMPANY  LTD. 

1919 


Most  of  these  pieces  appeared  during  the  -war. 
The  usual  acknowledgements  are  tendered  to  The 
Spectator  in  three  cases  and  The  Times  in 
two,  as  well  as  to  Land  and  Water,  The 
Cologne  Post  and  sundry  School  Magazines. 


ff 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

CONSECRATION i 

LORD'S  LEAVE 2 

LAST  POST 4 

THE  OLD  BOYS 7 

RUDDY  YOUNG  GINGER 9 

THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY       .        .        .        .12 

BOND  AND  FREE 29 

SHELL-SHOCK  IN  ARRAS 34 

THE  BIG  THING  ....  36 

FORERUNNERS      ....               .        .  40 

UPPINGHAM  SONG 42 

WOODEN  CROSSES 45 


861901 


CONSECRATION 

CHILDREN  we  deemed  you  all  the  days 

We  vexed  you  with  our  care : 
But  in  a  Universe  ablaze, 

What  was  your  childish  share  ? 
To  rush  upon  the  flames  of  Hell, 

To  quench  them  with  your  blood  ! 
To  be  of  England's  flower  that  fell 

Ere  yet  it  brake  the  bud  ! 

And  we  who  wither  where  we  grew. 

And  never  shed  but  tears, 
As  children  now  would  follow  you 

Through  the  remaining  years  ; 
Tread  in  the  steps  we  thought  to  guide, 

As  firmly  as  you  trod; 
And  keep  the  name  you  glorified 

Clean  before  man  and  God. 


LORD'S  LEAVE 

(1915) 

No  Lord's  this  year  :  no  silken  lawn  on  which 

A  dignified  and  dainty  throng  meanders. 
The  Schools  take  guard  upon  a  fierier  pitch 
Somewhere  in  Flanders. 

Bigger  the  cricket  here ;  yet  some  who  tried 

In  vain  to  earn  a  Colour  while  at  Eton 
Have  found  a  place  upon  an  England  side 
That  can't  be  beaten  ! 

A  demon  bowler's  bowling  with  his  head — 
His  heart's  as  black  as  skins  in  Carolina ! 
Either  he  breaks,  or  shoots  almost  as  dead 
As  Anne  Regina  ; 

While   the   deep-field-gun,  trained   upon   your 

stumps, 
From  concrete  grand-stand  far  beyond   the 

bound'ry, 

Lifts  up  his  ugly  mouth  and  fairly  pumps 
Shells  from  Krupp's  foundry. 


LORD'S  LEAVE  3 

But  like  the  time  the  game  is  out  of  joint — 
No  screen,  and  too  much  mud  for  cricket 

lover  ; 

Both  legs  go  slip,  and  there's  sufficient  point 
In  extra  cover ! 

Cricket  ?     Tis  Sanscrit  to  the  super-Hun — 
Cheap  cross  between  Caligula  and  Cassius, 
To  whom  speech,  prayer,  and   warfare  are  all 
one — 

Equally  gaseous ! 

Playing  a  game's  beyond  him  and  his  hordes ; 
Theirs   but   to   play  the   snake   or  wolf  or 

vulture : 

Better  one  sporting  lesson  learnt  at  Lord's 
Than  all  their  Kultur.  .  .  . 

Sinks  a  torpedoed  Phcebus  from  our  sight ; 

Over  the  field  of  play  see  darkness  stealing ; 
Only  in  this  one  game,  against  the  light 
There's  no  appealing. 

Now  for  their  flares  .  .  .  and  now  at  last  the 

stars  .  .  . 

Only  the  stars  now,  in  their  heavenly  million, 
Glisten  and  blink  for  pity  on  our  scars 
From  the  Pavilion. 


LAST  POST 

(1915) 

LAST  summer,  centuries  ago, 

I  watched  the  postman's  lantern  glow, 

As  night  by  night  on  leaden  feet 

He  twinkled  down  our  darkened  street. 

So  welcome  on  his  beaten  track, 
The  bent  man  with  the  bulging  sack  ! 
But  dread  of  every  sleepless  couch, 
A  whistling  imp  with  leathern  pouch  ! 

And  now  I  meet  him  in  the  way, 
And  earth  is  Heaven,  night  is  Day, 
For  oh !  there  shines  before  his  lamp 
An  envelope  without  a  stamp ! 

Address  in  pencil  ;  overhead, 

The  Censor's  triangle  in  red. 

Indoors  and  up  the  stair  I  bound  : 

"  One  from  the  boy,  still  safe,  still  sound  ! 

4 


LAST  POST 

"  Still  merry  in  a  dubious  trench 
They've  taken  over  from  the  French  ; 
Still  making  light  of  duty  done  ; 
Still  full  of  Tommy,  Fritz,  and  fun  ! 

"  Still  finding  War  of  games  the  cream, 
And  his  platoon  a  priceless  team — 
Still  running  it  by  sportsman's  rule, 
Just  as  he  ran  his  house  at  school. 

"  Still  wild  about  the  '  bombing  stunt ' 
He  makes  his  hobby  at  the  front. 
Still  trustful  of  his  wondrous  luck — 
'  Prepared  to  take  on  old  man  Kluck  ! '  " 

Awed  only  in  the  peaceful  spells, 
And  only  scornful  of  their  shells, 
His  beaming  eye  yet  found  delight 
In  ruins  lit  by  flares  at  night, 

In  clover  field  and  hedgerow  green, 
Apart  from  cover  or  a  screen, 
In  Nature  spurting  spick-and-span 
For  all  the  devilries  of  Man. 

He  said  those  weeks  of  blood  and  tears 
Were  worth  his  score  of  radiant  years. 
He  said  he  had  not  lived  before — 
Our  boy  who  never  dreamt  of  War ! 


THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

He  gave  us  of  his  own  dear  glow, 
Last  summer,  centuries  ago. 
Bronzed  leaves  still  cling  to  every  bough. 
I  don't  waylay  the  postman  now. 

Doubtless  upon  his  nightly  beat 
He  still  comes  twinkling  down  our  street. 
I  am  not  there  with  straining  eye — 
A  whistling  imp  could  tell  you  why. 


THE  OLD  BOYS 

(1917) 

"  WHO  is  the  one  with  the  empty  sleeve  ? " 

"  Some  sport  who  was  in  the  swim." 
"  And   the  one  with   the  ribbon  who's  home  on 
leave  ? " 

"  Good  Lord  !  I  remember  htm  ! 
A  hulking  fool,  low  down  in  the  school, 

And  no  good  at  games  was  he — 
All  fingers  and  thumbs — and  very  few  chums. 

(I  wish  he'd  shake  hands  with  me  !)  " 

"  Who  is  the  one  with  the  heavy  stick, 

Who  seems  to  walk  from  the  shoulder  ?  " 
"  Why,  many's  the  goal  you  have  watched  him 
kick ! " 

"  He's  looking  a  lifetime  older. 
Who  is  the  one  that's  so  full  of  fun — 

I  never  beheld  a  blither — 
Yet  his  eyes  are  fixt  as  the  furrow  betwixt  ? " 

"  He  cannot  see  out  of  either." . 
7 


8  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

"  Who  are  the  ones  that  we  cannot  see, 

Though  we  feel  them  as  near  as  near  ? 
In  Chapel  one  felt  them  bend  the  knee, 

At  the  match  one  felt  them  cheer. 
In  the  deep  still  shade  of  the  Colonnade, 

In  the  ringing  quad's  full  light, 
They  are  laughing  here,  they  are  chaffing  there, 

Yet  never  in  sound  or  sight." 

"  Oh,  those  are  the  ones  who  never  shall  leave, 

As  they  once  were  afraid  they  would  ! 
They  marched  away  from  the  school  at  eve, 

But  at  dawn  came  back  for  good, 
With  deathless  blooms  from  uncoffin'd  tombs 

To  lay  at  our  Founder's  shrine. 
As  many  are  they  as  ourselves  to-day, 

And  their  place  is  yours  and  mine." 

"  But  who  are  the  ones  they  can  help  or  harm  ? " 

"  Each  small  boy,  never  so  new, 
Has  an  Elder  Brother  to  take  his  arm, 

And  show  him  the  thing  to  do — 
And  the  thing  to  resist  with  a  doubled  fist, 

If  he'd  be  nor  knave  nor  fool — 
And  the  Game  to  play  if  he'd  tread  the  way 

Of  the  School  behind  the  school." 


RUDDY  YOUNG  GINGER 


RUDDY  young  Ginger  was  somewhere  in  camp, 

War  broke  it  up  in  a  day, 
Packing  cadets  of  the  steadier  stamp 

Home  with  the  smallest  delay. 
Ginger  braves  town  in  his  O.T.C.  rags  — 

Beards  a  Staff  Marquis  —  the  limb  ! 
Saying,  "  Your  son,  Sir,  is  one  of  my  fags," 

Gets  a  Commission  through  him. 
Then  to  his  tailor's  for  khaki  complet  ; 

Then  to  Pall  Mall  for  a  sword  ; 
Lastly,  a  wire  to  his  people  to  say, 

"Left    school  —  joined     the     Line  —  are    you 
bored  ?  " 

And  it  was  a  bit  cool 
(A  term's  fees  in  the  pool 
By  a  rule  of  the  school). 
There  were  those  who  said  "  Fool  !  " 
Of  young  Ginger. 
9 


io  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Ruddy  young  Ginger  !     Who  gave  him  that  name  ? 

Tommies  who  had  his  own  nerve  ! 
"  Into  'im,  Ginger  ! "  was  heard  in  a  game 

With  a  neighbouring  Special  Reserve. 
Blushing  and  grinning  and  looking  fifteen, 

Ginger,  with  howitzer  punt, 
Bags  his  man's  wind  as  succinctly  and  clean 

As  he  hopes  to  bag  Huns  at  the  front. 
Death  on  recruits  who  fall  out  by  the  way, 

Sentries  who  yawn  at  their  post, 
Yet  he  sang  such  a  song  at  the  Y.M.C.A. 

That  the  C.O.  turned  green  as  a  ghost ! 

Less  the  song  than  the  stance, 
And  the  dissolute  dance, 
Drew  a  glance  so  askance 
That  .  .  .  they  packed  him  to  France, 
Little  Ginger. 

Next  month,  to  the  haunts  of  fine    Ladies   and 
Lords 

I  ventured,  in  Grosvenor  Square  : 
The  stateliest  chambers  were  hospital  wards — 

And  ruddy  young  Ginger  was  there. 
In  spite  of  his  hurts  he  looked  never  so  red, 

Nor  ever  less  shy  or  sedate, 

Though  his  hair  had  been  cropped  (by  machine- 
gun,  he  said) 

And  bandages  turbaned  his  pate. 


RUDDY  YOUNG  GINGER  n 

He    was    mostly    in    holes — but    his   cheek   was 
intact ! 

I  could  not  but  notice,  with  joy, 
The  loveliest  Sisters  had  most  to  transact 

With  ruddy  young  Ginger — some  boy  ! 

Slaying  Huns  by  the  tons, 
With  a  smile  like  a  nun's — 
Oh  !  of  all  the  brave  ones, 
All  the  sons  of  our  guns — 
Give  me  Ginger ! 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY 

(1917) 

Solomon  cited  wonders  three  ; 
One  was  the  way  of  a  ship  at  sea, 
One  was  the  way  of  a  mighty  bird, 
And  the  way  of  a  serpent  was  the  third. 
But  Solomon  (since  he  was  in  the  trade) 
Appended  the  way  of  a  man  with  a  maid : 
And  Solomon  (still  in  the  flesh}  might  add 
The  way  of  a  maid  with  a  soldier  lad. 

THIS  is  the  story  of  Ensign  Joy 

(And  the  obsolete  rank  withal 
That  I  love  for  each  gentle  English  boy 

Who  jumped  to  his  country's  call. 
By  their  fire  and  fun,  and  the  deeds  they've  done, 
/  would  gazette  them  Second  to  none 

Who  faces  a  gun  in  Gaul !) 

It  is  also  the  story  of  Ermyntrude 

(A  less  appropriate  name 
For  an  idealistic  Academy  prude  ; 

But  under  it,  all  the  same, 


THE   BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      13 

The  usual  consanguineous  squad 
Had  made  her  an  honest  child  of  God, 
And  cannot  be  held  to  blame). 

It  was  just  when  the  grind  of  the  Special  Reserves, 

Employed  upon  Coast  Defence, 
Was  getting  on  every  Ensign's  nerves — 

Sick-keen  to  be  drafted  hence — 
That  they  met  and  played  tennis  and  danced  and 

sang, 
The  lad  with  the  laugh  and  the  schoolboy  slang, 

The  girl  with  the  eyes  intense. 

Yet  it  wasn't  for  him   that  she  languished  and 

sighed, 

But  for  all  of  our  dear  doomed  youth  ; 
And  it  wasn't  for  her,  but  her  sex,  that  he  cried, 

If  he  could  but  have  probed  the  truth. 
Did   she?     She   would   none    of  his   hot  young 

heart ; 

As  khaki  escort  he's  tall  and  smart, 
As  lover  a  shade  uncouth. 

He  went   with   his  draft.     She   returned   to  her 
craft. 

He  wrote  in  his  merry  vein  ; 
She  read  him  aloud,  and  the  Studio  laughed ! 

(Ermyntrude  bore  the  strain.) 


i4  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

He  was  full  of  gay  bloodshed  and  Old  Man  Fritz 
His  flippancy  sent  her  friends  into  fits. 
(Ermyntrude  frowned  with  pain.) 

His  tales  of  the  Sergeant  who  swore  so  hard 

Left  Ermyntrude  cold  and  prim  ; 
The  tactless  truth  of  the  picture  jarred, 

And  some  of  his  jokes  were  grim. 
Yet,  let  him  but  skate  upon  tender  ice, 
And  he  had  to  write  to  her  twice  or  thrice 

Before  she  would  answer  him. 

(Yet  once  she  sent  him  a  fairy's  box, 

And  her  pocket  felt  the  brunt 
Of  tinned  contraptions  and  books  and  socks — 

Which  he  hailed  as  "  a  sporting  stunt ! " 
She  slaved  at  his  muffler  none  the  less, 
And  still  took  pleasure  in  murmuring,  "  Yes — 

For  a  friend  of  mine  at  the  Front") 

One  fine  morning  his  name  appears — 

Looking  so  pretty  in  print ! 
"  Wounded  !  "  she  warbles  in  tragedy  tears — 

And  pictures  the  reddening  lint, 
The  drawn  damp  face  and  the  draggled  hair  .  .  . 
But  she  found  him  blooming  in  Belgrave  Square, 

With  a  punctured  shin  in  a  splint. 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      15 

It  wasn't  a  haunt  of  Ermyntrude's, 

That  grandiose  urban  pile  ; 
Like  starlight  in  arctic  altitudes 

Was  the  stately  Sister's  smile. 
Tropical  sunshine  was  Ensign  Joy — 
In  his  golden  greeting  no  least  alloy — 

In  his  beaming  eyes  no  guile. 

He  showed  her  the  bullet  that  did  the  trick — 

He  showed  her  the  trick,  X-ray'd  ; 
He  showed  her  a  table  timed  to  a  tick, 

And  a  map  that  an  airman  made. 
He  spoke  of  a  shell  that  caused  grievous  loss — 
But  he  never  mentioned  a  certain  Cross 

For  his  part  in  the  camisade. 

She  saw  it  herself  in  a  list  next  day, 
And  it  brought  her  back  to  his  bed 

With  a  number  of  beautiful  things  to  say, 
Which  were  mostly  over  his  head. 

Turned  pink  as  his  own  pyjamas'  stripe, 

To  her  mind  he  ceased  to  embody  a  type — 
Sank  into  her  heart  instead. 

"  I  wonder  that  all  of  you  didn't  retire  !  " 
"  My  blighters  were  not  that  kind." 

"  But  it   says  you — '  advanced   under  murderous 

fire, 
Machine-gun  and  shell  combined  ' — " 


1 6  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

"  Oh,  that's  the  regular  War  Office  wheeze  !  " 

" '  Advanced  ' — with  that  leg  ! — '  on  his  hands  and 

knees ' ! " 
"  I  couldn't  leave  it  behind." 

He  was  soon  trick-driving  an  invalid  chair, 

And  dancing  about  on  a  crutch. 
The  haute  noblesse  still  in  Belgrave  Square 

Were  moved  to  oblige  as  such. 
They  sent  him  for  many  a  motor-whirl — 
With  the  wistful,  willowy,  wisp  of  a  girl 

Who  never  again  lost  touch. 

Their  people  were  most  of  them  dead  and  gone,    ' 
They  had  only  themselves  to  please. 

His  pay  was  enough  to  marry  upon, 
As  every  Ensign  sees. 

They  would  muddle  along  as  others  did, 

On  vast  supplies  of  the  tertium  quid 
One  brackets  with  bread  and  cheese. 

They    gave    him     some    leave    after     Belgrave 
Square — 

And  bang  went  a  month  on  banns  ; 
For  Ermyntrude  had  a  natural  flair 

For  the  least  unusual  plans. 
Her  heaviest  uncle  came  down  well, 
And  entertained,  at  a  fair  hotel, 

The  dregs  of  the  coupled  clans. 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      17 

A  certain  number  of  cheques  accrued 

To  keep  the  wolf  from  the  door  : 
The  economical  Ermyntrude 

Had  charge  of  the  dwindling  store, 
When  a  Board  reported  her  bridegroom  fit 
As — some  expression  she  didn't  permit  .  .  . 

And  he  left  for  the  Front  once  more. 

His  crowd  had  been  climbing  the  jaws  of  hell : 
He  found  them  in  death's  dog-teeth, 

With  little  to  show  but  a  deal  to  tell 
In  their  fissure  of  smoking  heath. 

There  were  changes — of  course — but  the  change 
in  him 

Was  the  ribbon  that  showed  on  his  tunic  trim 
And  the  tumult  hidden  beneath  ! 

For  all  he  had  suffered  and  seen  before 
Seemed  nought  to  a  husband's  care  ; 

And  the  Chinese  puzzle  of  modern  war 
For  subtlety  couldn't  compare 

With  the  delicate  springs  of  the  complex  life 

To  be  led  with  a  highly  sensitised  wife 
In  a  slightly  rarefied  air ! 

Yet  it's  good  to  be  back  with  the  old  platoon — 

And  some  of  the  same  old  men  ; 
Each  cheery  dog  is  a  henchman  boon — 

Especially  Sergeant  Wren  ! 

C 


18  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Ermyntrude  couldn't  endure  his  name — 
Considered  bad  language  no  claim  to  fame, 
Yet  it's  good  to — hear  it  again  ! 

(Better  to  feel  the  Sergeant's  grip, 

Though  your  fingers  ache  to  the  bone ! 

Better  to  take  the  Sergeant's  tip 
Than  to  make  up  your  mind  alone. 

They   can    do    things    together,   can    Wren    and 
Joy— 

The  bristly  bear  and  the  beardless  boy — 
That  neither  could  do  on  his  own.) 

But  there's  never  a  word  about  Old  Man  Wren 
In  the  screeds  he  scribbles  to-day — 

Though  he  praises  his  N.C.O.'s  and  men 
In  rather  a  pointed  way. 

And  he  rubs  it  in  (with  a  knitted  brow) 

That  the  war's  as  good  as  a  picnic  now, 
And  better  than  any  play ! 

His  booby-hutch  is  "  as  safe  as  the  Throne," 
And  he  fares  "  like  the  C.-in-Chief." 

He  has  "  treated  his  chaps  to  a  gramophone 
By  way  of  comic  relief." 

(And  he  sighs  as  he  hears  the  chaps  applaud, 

While  the  Woodbine  spices  are  wafted  abroad 
With  a  savour  of  bully-beef.) 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      19 

He  may  touch  on  the  latest  type  of  bomb, 

But  Ermyntrude  needn't  blench, 
For  he  never  says  where  you  hurl  it  from, 

And  it  might  be  from  your  trench. 
He  never  might  lead  a  stealthy  band, 
Or  toe  the  horrors  of  No  Man's  Land, 

Or  swim  at  the  sickly  stench.  .  .  . 

Her  letters  came  up  by  ration-cart 

As  the  men  stood-to  before  dawn  : 
He  followed  the  chart  of  her  soaring  heart 

With  face  transfigured  yet  drawn  : 
It  filled  him  with  pride,  touched  with  chivalrous 

shame 
But — it  spoilt  the  war,  as  a  first-class  game, 

For  this  particular  pawn. 

(The  Sergeant  sees  it,  and  damns  the  cause 

In  a  duly  sulphurous  flow  ; 
But  turns  and  trounces,  without  a  pause, 

A  junior  N.C.O. 

For  the  crime  of  agreeing  that  Ensign  Joy 
Isn't  altogether  the  officer  boy 

That  he  was  four  months  ago !) 

At   length   he's   dumfounded    (the    month    being 

May) 
By  a  sample  of  Ermyntrude's  fun  : 


20  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

"  You  will  kindly  get  leave  over  Christmas  Day, 
Or  make  haste  and  finish  the  Hun  ! " 

But    Christmas    means    presents,    she    bids    him 
beware  : 

"  So  what  do  you  say  to  a  son  and  heir  ? 
I'm  thinking  of  giving  you  one  !  !  !  " 

What,  indeed,  does  the  Ensign  say  ? 

What  does  he  sit  and  write  ? 
What  do  his  heart-strings  drone  all  day, 

What  do  they  throb  all  night  ? 
What  does  he  add  to  his  piteous  prayers  : 
"  Not  for  my  own  sake,  Lord,  but — theirs, 

See  me  safe  through.  .  .  ." 

"  They   talk  " — and    he   writhes — "  of   our    spirit 
out  here, 

Our  valour  and  all  the  rest ! 
There's  my  poor,  lonely,  delicate  dear, 

As  brave  as  the  very  best ! 
We  stand  or  fall  in  a  cheery  crowd, 
And  yet  how  often  we  grouse  aloud  ! 

She  faces  that  with  a  jest !  " 

He  has  had  no  sleep  for  a  day  and  a  night ; 

He  has  written  her  half  a  ream  ; 
He  has  lain  him  down  to  wait  for  the  light, 

And  at  last  come  sleep — and  a  dream. 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      21 

He's  hopping  on  sticks  up  the  studio  stair : 
A  telegraph-boy  is  waiting  there, 
And — that  is  his  darling's  scream  ! 


He  picks  her  up  in  a  tender  storm — 

But  how  does  it  come  to  pass 
That  he  cannot  see  his  reflected  form 

With  hers  in  the  studio  glass  ? 
"  What's  gone  wrong  with  that  mirror  ?  "  he  cries. 
But  only  the  Sergeant's  voice  replies : 

11  Wake  up,  Sir  !     The  Gas— the  Gas  !  " 

Is  it  a  part  of  the  dream  of  dread  ? 

What  are  the  men  about  ? 
Each  one  sticking  a  haunted  head 

Into  a  spectral  clout ! 
Funny,  the  dearth  of  gibe  and  joke, 
When  each  one  looks  like  a  pig  in  a  poke, 

Not  omitting  the  snout ! 

"  Here's  your  mask,  Sir  !     No  time  to  lose  !  " 

Ugh,  what  a  gallows  shape ! 
Partly  white  cap,  and  partly  noose ! 

Somebody  ties  the  tape, 
Goggles  of  sorts,  it  seems,  inset : 
Cock  them  over  the  parapet, 

Study  the  battlescape. 


22  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Ensign  Joy's  in  the  second  line — 

And  more  than  a  bit  cut  off; 
A  furlong  or  so  down  a  green  incline 

The  fire-trench  curls  in  the  trough. 
Joy  cannot  see  it — it's  in  the  bed 
Of  a  river  of  poison  that  brims  instead. 

He  can  only  hear — a  cough ! 

Nothing  to  do  for  the  companies  there — 

Nothing  but  waiting  now, 
While  the  Gas  rolls  up  on  the  balmy  air, 

And  a  small  bird  cheeps  on  a  bough. 
All  of  a  sudden  the  sky  seems  full 
Of  trusses  of  lighted  cotton-wool 

And  the  enemy's  big  bow-wow ! 

The  firmament  cracks  with  his  airy  mines, 

And  an  interlacing  hail 
Threshes  the  clover  between  our  lines, 

As  a  vile  invisible  flail. 
And  the  trench  has  become  a  mighty  vice 
That  holds  us,  in  skins  of  molten  ice, 

For  the  vapours  that  fringe  the  veil. 

It's  coming — in  billowy  swirls — as  smoke 
From  the  roof  a  world  on  fire. 

It — comes  !     And  a  lad  with  a  heart  of  oak 
Knows  only  that  heart's  desire ! 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      23 

His  masked  lips  whimper  but  one  dear  name — 
And  so  is  he  lost  to  inward  shame 

That  he  thrills  at  the  shout :  "Re-tire  I " 


Whose  is  the  order,  thrice  renewed  ? 

Ensign  Joy  cannot  tell : 
Only,  that  way  lies  Ermyntrude, 

And  the  other  way  this  hell ! 
Three  men  leap  from  the  poisoned  fosse, 
Three  men  plunge  from  the  parados, 

And — their — officer — as  well ! 

Now,  as  he  flies  at  their  flying  heels, 

He  awakes  to  his  deep  disgrace, 
And  the  yawning  pit  of  his  shame  reveals 

A  way  of  saving  his  face  : 
He  twirls  his  stick  to  a  shepherd's  crook, 
To  trip  and  bring  one  of  them  back  to  book, 

As  though  he'd  been  giving  chase  ! 

He  got  back  gasping — "  They'd  too  much  start !  " 
"  I'd've  shot  'em  at  sight !  "  said  Wren. 

"  That  was  your  job,  Sir,  if  you'd  the  'eart — 
But  it  wouldn't've  been  you,  then. 

I  pray  my  Lord  I  may  live  to  see 

A  firing-party  in  front  o"  them  three  ! " 
(That's  what  he  said  to  the  men.) 


24  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Now,  Joy  and  Wren,  of  Company  B, 

Are  a  favourite  firm  of  mine ; 
And  the  way  they  reinforced  A,  C,  and  D 

Was  perhaps  not  exactly  fine, 
But  it  meant  a  good  deal  both  to  Wren  and  Joy — 
That  grim,  gaunt  man,  but  that  desperate  boy  !— 

And  it  didn't  weaken  the  Line. 

"  Not  a  bad  effort  of  yours,  my  lad," 

The  Major  deigned  to  declare. 
"  My  Sergeant's  plan,  Sir  " — 

"  And  that's  not  bad — 

But  you've  lost  that  ribbon  you  wear  ?  " 
"  It — must  have  been — eaten  away  by  the  Gas  !  " 
"  Well — ribbons  are  ribbons — but  don't  be  an  ass  ! 

It's  better  to  do  than  dare." 

Dare !      He  has  dared  to  desert  his  post — 
But  he  daren't  acknowledge  his  sin  ! 

He  has  dared  to  face  Wren  with  a  lying  boast — 
But  Wren  is  not  taken  in. 

None  sings  his  praises  so  long  and  loud — 

With  look  so  loving  and  loyal  and  proud  ! 
But  the  boy  sees  under  his  skin. 

Daily  and  gaily  he  wrote  to  his  wife, 
Who  had  dropped  the  beatified  droll 

And  was  writing  to  him  on  the  marvel  of  Life, 
Which  illumed  and  exalted  her  soul. 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      25 

Her  courage  was  high,  though  she  mentioned  its 

height : 

But  he  saw  not  a  joint  in  her  Armour  of  Light, 
Nor  the  bee  in  her  Aureole. 


And  never  a  helm  had  the  lad  we  know 

As  he  stole  on  his  nightly  raids, 
With  a  brace  of  his  Blighters,  an  N.C.O. 

And  a  bagful  of  hand-grenades. 
But  the  way  that  he  rattled  and  harried  the  Hun — 
The  deeds  he  did  dare,  and  the  risks  he  would 
run — 

Were  the  gossip  of  two  Brigades  : 

How  he'd  stand  stock-still  as  the  trunk  of  a  tree, 
With  his  face  tucked  down  out  of  sight, 

When  a  star-shell  burst  and  the  other  three 
Fell  prone  in  the  frightening  light ; 

How    the    German    sandbags,    that    made   them 
quake, 

Were  the  only  cover  he  cared  to  take, 
But  he'd  eavesdrop  there  all  night.   .  .   . 

Machine-guns,  tapping  a  phrase  in  Morse, 

Grew  hot  on  a  random  quest, 
And  swarms  of  bullets  buzzed  down  the  course 

Like  wasps  from  a  trampled  nest. 


26  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Yet,  that  last  night  .  .  .  They  had  just  set  off, 
When   he  pitched  on  his  face  with  a  smothered 

cough 
And  a  row  of  holes  in  his  chest. 

He  left  a  letter.      It  saved  the  lives 
Of  the  three  who  ran  from  the  Gas ; 

A  small  enclosure  alone  survives, 
In  Battersea,  under  glass  : 

Only  the  ribbon  he  tore  from  his  breast 

On  the  day  he  turned  and  ran  with  the  rest, 
And  lied  with  a  lip  of  brass  ! 

But  the  letters  they  wrote  about  the  boy, 

From  the  Brigadier  to  the  men  ! 
They  would  "  never  forget  dear  Mr.  Joy," 

Nor  look  on  his  like  again. 
Ermyntrude  read  them  with  dry,  proud  eye. 
There  was  only  one  letter  that  made  her  cry. 

It  was  from  Sergeant  Wren  : 

"  There  never  was  such  a  fearless  man, 

Or  one  so  beloved  as  he. 
He  was  always  up  to  some  daring  plan, 

Or  some  treat  for  his  men  and  me. 
There  wasn't  his  match  when  he  went  away  ; 
But  since  he  got  back,  there  has  not  been  a  day 

But  what  he  has  earned  a  V.C."  .  .  . 


THE  BALLAD  OF  ENSIGN  JOY      27 

A  cynical  story  ?     That's  not  my  view. 

The  years  since  he  fell  are  twain. 
What  were  his  chances  of  coming  through  ? 

Which  of  his  friends  remain  ? 
But  Ermyntrude's  training  a  splendid  boy 
Twenty  years  younger  than  Ensign  Joy. 

On  balance,  a  British  gain  ! 

And  Ermyntrude,  did  she  lose  her  all, 

Or  find  it,  two  years  ago  ? 
O  young  girl-wives  of  the  boys  who  fall, 

With  your  youth  and  your  babes  to  show ! 
No  heart  but  bleeds  for  your  widowhood  : 
Yet  Life  is  with  you,  and  Life  is  good  : 

No  bone  of  your  bone  lies  low ! 

Your  blessedness  came — as  it  went — in  a  day. 

Deep  dread  but  heightened  your  mirth. 
Your  idols'  feet  never  turned  to  clay — 

Never  lit  upon  common  earth. 
Love  is  the  Game  but  is  not  the  Goal : 
You  played  it  together,  body  and  soul, 

And  you  had  your  Candle's  worth. 

Yes  !  though  the  Candle  light  a  Shrine, 

And  heart  cannot  count  the  cost, 
You  are  Winners  yet  in  its  holy  shine  ! — 

Would  they  choose  to  have  lived  and  lost  ? 


28  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

There  are  chills,  you  see,  for  the  finest  hearts  ; 
But,  once  it  is  only  old  Death  that  parts, 
There  can  never  come  twinge  of  frost. 

And  this  be  our  comfort  for  Everyboy 

Cut  down  in  his  high  heyday, 
Or  ever  the  Sweets  of  the  Morning  cloy, 

Or  the  swift  foot  falter  or  stray. 
So  a  sunlit  billow  curls  to  a  crest, 
And  shouts  as  it  breaks  at  its  loveliest, 

In  a  glory  of  rainbow  spray  ! 


BOND  AND  FREE 

(THE  BAPAUME  ROAD,  March  1917) 

MISTY  and  pale  the  sunlight,  brittle  and  black  the 

trees  ; 
Roads  powdered  like  sticks  of  candy  for  a  car  to 

crunch  as  they  freeze  .  .  . 
Then  we  overtook  a  Battalion  .  .  .  and  it  wasn't 

a  roadway  then, 
But    cymbals    and    drums   and  dulcimers  to  the 

beat  of  the  marching  men  ! 

They  were  laden  and  groomed  for  the  trenches, 

they  were  shaven  and  scrubbed  and  fed  ; 
Like  the  scales  of  a  single  Saurian  their  helmets 

rippled  ahead  ; 
Not  a  sorrowful  face  beneath  them,  just  the  tail 

of  a  scornful  eye 
For    the    car    full  of   favoured    mufti    that  went 

quacking  and  quaking  by. 

You  gloat  and  take  note  in  your  motoring  coat, 
and  the  sights  come  fast  and  thick  : 

A  party  of  pampered  prisoners,  toying  with  shovel 
and  pick  ; 

29 


30  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

A  town  where  some  of  the  houses  are  so  many 

heaps  of  stone, 
And  some  of  them  steel  anatomies  picked  clean 

to  the  buckled  bone. 


A  road  like  a  pier  in  a  hurricane  of  mountainous 

seas  of  mud, 
Where  a  few  trees,  whittled  to  walking-sticks,  rose 

out  of  the  frozen  flood 
Like  the  masts  of  the  sunken  villages  that  might 

have  been  down  below — 
Or  blown  off  the  festering  face  of  an  earth  that 

God  Himself  wouldn't  know  ! 

Not  a  yard  but  was  part  of  a  shell-hole — not  an 

inch,  to  be  more  precise — 
And  most  of  the  holes  held  water,  and  all  the 

water  was  ice : 
They  stared  at  the  bleak  blue  heavens  like  the 

glazed  blue  eyes  of  the  slain, 
Till  the  snow  came,  shutting    them  gently,  and 

sheeting  the  slaughtered  plain. 

Here  a  pile  of  derelict  rifles,  there  a  couple  of 

horses  lay — 
Like  rockerless  rocking-horses,  as  wooden  of  leg 

as  they, 


BOND  AND  FREE  31 

And  not  much  redder  of  nostril — not  anything 

like  so  grim 
As  the  slinking  ghoul  of  a  lean  live  cat  creeping 

over  the  crater's  rim  ! 


And  behind  and  beyond  and  about  us  were  the 

long  black  Dogs  of  War, 
With  pigmies  pulling   their  tails   for   them,  and 

making  the  monsters  roar 
As  they  slithered  back  on  their  haunches,  as  they 

put  out  their  flaming  tongues, 
And  spat  a  murderous  message  long  leagues  from 

their  iron  lungs  ! 

They  were  kennelled  in  every  corner,  and  some 

were  in  gay  disguise, 
But  all  kept  twitching  their  muzzles  and  baying 

the  silvery  skies ! 
A  howitzer  like  a  hyena  guffawed  point-blank  at 

the  car — 
But  only  the  sixty  -  pounder   leaves  an  absolute 

aural  scar ! 

(Could  a  giant  but  crack  a  cable  as  a  stockman 

cracks  his  whip, 
Or  tear  up  a  mile  of  calico  with  one  unthinkable 

r-r-r-r-rip  ! 


32  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Could  he  only  squeak  a  slate-pencil    about    the 

size  of  this  gun, 
You  might  get  some  faint  idea  of  its  sound,  which 

is  those  three  sounds  in  one.) 

But  certain    noises  were  absent,  we    looked    for 

some  sights  in  vain, 
And   I  cannot    tell    you  if   shrapnel  does  really 

descend  like  rain — 
Or    Big    Stuff  burst    like    a    bonfire,   or   bullets 

whistle  or  moan  ; 
But  the  other  figures  I'll  swear  to — if  some  of 

'em  are  my  own  ! 


Livid  and   moist  the  twilight,  heavy  with    snow 

the  trees, 
And  a  road  as  of  pleated  velvet  the  colour  of  new 

cream-cheese  .  .  . 
Then    we    overtook    a    Battalion   .    .   .    and    I'm 

hunting  still  for  the  word 
For  that    gaunt,  undaunted,  haunted,  whitening, 

frightening  herd  ! 

They  had  done  their  tour  of  the  trenches,  they 
were  coated  and  caked  with  mud, 

And  some  of  them  wore  a  bandage,  and  some  of 
them  wore  their  blood  ! 


BOND   AND  FREE  33 

The  gaps  in  their  ranks  were  many,  and  none  of 

them  looked  at  me  .  .  . 
And  I  thought  of  no  more  vain  phrases  for  the 

things  I  was  there  to  see, 
But  I  felt  like  a  man  in  a  prison  van  where  the 

rest  of  the  world  goes  Free. 


i) 


SHELL-SHOCK   IN   ARRAS 

(1918) 

ALL  night  they  crooned  high  overhead 

As  the  skies  are  over  men  : 
I  lay  and  smiled  in  my  cellar  bed, 

And  went  to  sleep  again. 

All  day  they  whistled  like  a  lash 

That  cracked  in  the  trembling  town  : 

I  stood  and  listened  for  the  crash 
Of  houses  thundering  down. 

In,  in  they  came,  three  nights  and  days, 

All  night  and  all  day  long ; 
It  made  us  learned  in  their  ways 

And  experts  on  their  song. 

Like  a  noisy  clock,  or  a  steamer's  screw, 
Their  beat  debauched  the  ear, 

And  left  it  dead  to  a  deafening  few 
That  burst  who  cared  how  near? 
34 


SHELL-SHOCK  IN  ARRAS  35 

We  only  laughed  when  the  flimsy  floor 
Heaved  on  the  shuddering  sod  : 

But  when  some  idiot  slammed  a  door — 
My  God  ! 


THE   BIG  THING 

(1918) 

IT  was  a  British  Linesman.     His  face  was  like  a 

fist, 
His    sleeve    all    stripes    and    chevrons   from    the 

elbow  to  the  wrist. 

Said  he  to  an  American  (with  other  words  of  his) : 
"  It's  a  big  thing  you  are  doing — do  you  know 

how  big  it  is  ?  " 

"  I  guess,  Sir,"  that  American  inevitably  drawled, 
"  Big  Bill's  our  proposition  an'  we're  goin'  for  him 

bald. 
You  guys  may  have  him  rattled,  but  I  figure  it's 

for  us 
To  slaughter,  quarter,  grill  or  bile,  an'  masticate 

the  cuss." 

"  I    hope   your   teeth,"  the   Linesman   said,  "  are 

equal  to  your  tongue — 
But  that's  the  sort  of  carrion  that's  better  when 

it's  hung. 

36 


THE  BIG  THING  37 

Yet — the  big  thing  you're  doing  I  should  like  to 

make  you  see  !  " 
"  Our  stunt,"  said  that  young  Yankee,  "  is  to  set 

the  whole  world  free  !  " 


The  Linesman  used  a  venial  verb  (and  other  parts 

of  speech)  : 
"  That's    just    the    way    the    papers    talk    and 

politicians  preach ! 
But  apart  from  gastronomical  designs  upon  the 

Hun- 
And  the  rather  taller  order — there's  a  big  thing 

that  you've  done" 

"  Why,  say  !     The  biggest  thing  on  earth,  to  any 

cute  onlooker, 
Is   Old    Man    Bull   and   Uncle   Sam   aboard   the 

same  blamed  hooker ! 
One  crew,  one  port,  one  speed  ahead,  steel-true 

twin-hearts  within  her : 
One     ding-dong    English -singin'    race — a    race 

without  a  winner  !  " 

The  boy's  a  boyish  mixture — half  high-brow  and 

half  droll : 
So   brave   and   na'fve   and   cock-a-hoop — so  sure 

yet  pure  of  soul ! 


38  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Behold  him  bright  and  beaming  as  the  bride- 
groom after  church — 

The  Linesman  looking  wistful  as  a  rival  in  the 
lurch  ! 


"  I'd  love  to  be  as  young  as  you — "  he  doesn't 

even  swear — 
"  Love  to  be  joining  up  anew  and  spoiling  for  my 

share ! 
But  when  your  blood  runs  cold  and  old,  and  brain 

and  bowels  squirm, 
The  only  thing  to  ease  you  is  some  fresh  blood  in 

the  firm. 

"  When  the  war  was  young,  and  we  were  young, 

we  felt  the  same  as  you  : 
A  few  short  months  of  glory — and  we  didn't  care 

how  few ! 
French,  British  and  Dominions,  it  took  us  all  the 

same — 
Who  knows  but  what  the  Hun  himself  enjoyed 

his  dirty  game ! 

"  We  tumbled  out  of  tradesmen's  carts,  we  fell  off 

office  stools  ; 
Fathers  forsook  their  families,  boys  ran  away  from 

schools  ; 


THE  BIG  THING  39 

Mothers  untied  their  apron-strings,  lovers  un- 
loosed their  arms — 

All  Europe  was  a  wedding  and  the  bells  were 
war's  alarms ! 

"  The  chime  had  changed — You  took  a  pull — the 
old  wild  peal  rings  on 

With  the  clamour  and  the  glamour  of  a  Genera- 
tion gone. 

Their  fun — their  fire — their  hearts'  desire — are 
born  again  in  You  ! " 

"  That  the  big  thing  we're  doin'  ? " 

"  It's  as  big  as  Man  can  do  !  " 


FORERUNNERS1 

(1900) 

WHEN  I  lie  dying  in  my  bed, 

A  grief  to  wife,  and  child,  and  friend, — 
How  I  shall  grudge  you  gallant  dead 

Your  sudden,  swift,  heroic  end  ! 

Dear  hands  will  minister  to  me, 

Dear  eyes  deplore  each  shallower  breath  : 

You  had  your  battle-cries,  you  three, 
To  cheer  and  charm  you  to  your  death. 

You  did  not  wane  from  worse  to  worst, 
Under  coarse  drug  or  futile  knife, 

But  in  one  grand  mad  moment  burst 

From  glorious  life  to  glorious  Life.  .  .  . 

These  twenty  years  ago  and  more, 
'Mid  purple  heather  and  brown  crag, 

Our  whole  school  numbered  scarce  a  score, 
And  three  have  fallen  for  the  Flag. 

i  H.  P.  P.— F.  M.— J.  W.  A.  C.     St.  Ninian's,  Moffat,  1879- 
1880;  South  Africa,  1899-1900. 

40 


FORERUNNERS  41 

You  two  have  finished  on  one  side, 
You  who  were  friend  and  foe  at  play  ; 

Together  you  have  done  and  died  ; 

But  that  was  where  you  learnt  the  way. 

And  the  third  face !     I  see  it  now, 

So  delicate  and  pale  and  brave. 
The  clear  grey  eye,  the  unruffled  brow, 

Were  ripening  for  a  soldier's  grave. 

Ah  !  gallant  three,  too  young  to  die  ! 

The  pity  of  it  all  endures. 
Yet,  in  my  own  poor  passing,  I 

Shall  lie  and  long  for  such  as  yours. 


UPPINGHAM  SONG 

(1913) 

AGES  ago  (as  to-day  they  are  reckoned) 

I  was  a  lone  little,  blown  little  fag  : 
Panting  to  heel  when  Authority  beckoned, 

Spoiling  to  write  for  the  Uppingham  Mag.  ! 
Thirty  years  on  seemed  a  terrible  time  then — 

Thirty  years  back  seems  a  twelvemonth  or  so. 
Little  I  saw  myself  spinning  this  rhyme  then — 

Less  do  I  feel  that  it's  ages  ago ! 

Ages  ago  that  was  Somebody's  study ; 

Somebody  Else  had  the  study  next  door. 
O  their  long  walks  in  the  fields  dry  or  muddy ! 

O  their  long  talks  in  the  evenings  of  yore ! 
Still,  when  they  meet,  the  old  evergreen  fellows 

Jaw  in  the  jolly  old  jargon  as  though 
Both  were  as  slender  and  sound  in  the  bellows 

As  they  were  ages  and  ages  ago ! 
42 


UPPINGHAM  SONG  43 

O   but   the   ghosts    at   each   turn    I    could   show 
you ! — 

Ghosts  in  low  collars  and  little  cloth  caps — 
Each  of  'em  now  quite  an  elderly  O.U. — 

Wiser,  no  doubt,  and  as  pleasant — perhaps  ! 
That's   where   poor    Jack    lit   the   slide   up   with 
tollies, 

Once  when  the  quad  was  a  foot  deep  in  snow — 
When  a  live  Bishop  was  one  of  the  Follies  1 — 

Ages  and  ages  and  ages  ago ! 

Things  that  were  Decent  and  things   that  were 
Rotten, 

How  I  remember  them  year  after  year ! 
Some — it  may  be — that  were  better  forgotten  : 

Some  that — it   may   be — should   still  draw  a 

tear  .  .  . 
More,  many  more,  that  are  good  to  remember : 

Yarns  that  grow  richer,  the  older  they  grow  : 
Deeds  that  would  make  a  man's  ultimate  ember 

Glow  with  the  fervour  of  ages  ago  ! 

Did  we  play  footer  in  funny  long  flannels  ? 

Had  we  no  Corps  to  give  zest  to  our  drill  ? 
Never  a  Gym  lined  throughout  with  pine  panels  ? 

Half  of  your  best  buildings  were  quarry-stone 
still  ? 

1  =  Praepostors. 


44  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

Ah  !    but  it's  not  for  their  looks  that   you    love 
them, 

Not  for  the  craft  of  the  builder  below, 
But  for  the  spirit  behind  and  above  them — 

But  for  the  Spirit  of  Ages  Ago  ! 

Eton  may  rest  on  her  Field  and  her  River. 

Harrow  has  songs  that  she  knows  how  to  sing. 
Winchester  slang  makes  the  sensitive  shiver. 

Rugby  had  Arnold,  but  never  had  Thring ! 
Repton  can  put  up  as  good  an  Eleven. 

Marlborough  men  are  the  fear  of  the  foe. 
All  that  I  wish  to  remark  is — thank  Heaven 

I  was  at  Uppingham  ages  ago  ! 


WOODEN    CROSSES 

(1917) 

"  Go  live  the  wide   world   over — but  when   you 

come  to  die, 
A  quiet  English  churchyard   is  the  only  place  to 

lie !  "— 
I    held    it    half   a   lifetime,   until   through    war's 

mischance 
I  saw  the  wooden  crosses  that  fret  the  fields  of 

France. 

A  thrush  sings  in  an  oak-tree,  and  from  the  old 

square  tower 

A  chime  as  sweet  and  mellow  salutes  the  idle  hour: 
Stone  crosses  take  no  notice  —  but  the  little 

wooden  ones 
Are  thrilling  every  minute  to  the  music  of  the  guns ! 

Upstanding  at  attention  they  face  the  cannonade, 
In  apple-pie  alinement  like  Guardsmen  on  parade  : 
But  Tombstones  are  Civilians  who  loll  or  sprawl 

or  sway 

At  every  crazy  angle  and  stage  of  slow  decay. 

45 


46  THE  YOUNG  GUARD 

For   them   the   Broken    Column — in    its   plot   of 

unkempt  grass  ; 
The    tawdry    tinsel    garland    safeguarded    under 

glass  ; 
And  the  Squire's  emblazoned  virtues,  that  would 

overweight  a  Saint, 
On  the  vault  empaled  in    iron — scaling   red   for 

want  of  paint ! 

The    men    who    die   for   England   don't   need  it 

rubbing  in  ; 

An  automatic  stamper  and  a  narrow  strip  of  tin 
Record  their  date  and  regiment,  their  number  and 

their  name — 
And  the  Squire  who  dies  for  England  is  treated 

just  the  same. 

So  stand  the  still  battalions  :  alert,  austere,  serene  ; 
Each  with  his  just  allowance  of  brown  earth  shot 

with  green  ; 
None    better    than    his    neighbour    in    pomp    or 

circumstance — 
All  beads  upon  the  rosary  that  turned  the  fate  of 

France ! 

Who  says  their  war  is  over  ?     While  others  carry 

on, 
The  little  wooden  crosses  spell  but  the  dead  and 

gone? 


WOODEN  CROSSES  47 

Not  while  they  deck  a  sky-line,  not  while  they 

crown  a  view, 
Or  a  living  soldier  sees  them  and  sets  his  teeth 

anew ! 

The  tenants  of  the  churchyard  where  the  singing 

thrushes  build 
Were  not,  perhaps,  all  paragons  of  promise  well 

fulfilled  : 
Some  failed — through  Love,  or  Liquor — while  the 

parish  looked  askance. 
But — you  cannot  die  a  Failure  if  you  win  a  Cross 

in  France ! 

The   brightest    gems   of   Valour    in   the   Army's 

diadem 

Are  the  V.C.  and  the  D.S.O.,  M.C.  and  D.C.M. 
But  those  who  live  to  wear  them  will  tell  you 

they  are  dross 
Beside  the  Final    Honour  of  a  simple   Wooden 

Cross. 


Printtd  in  Great  Britain  by  R.  &  R.  CLARK,  LJMITK>,  Edinburgh. 


UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA  LIBRARY 

Los  Angeles 
This  book  is  DUE  on  the  last  date  stamped  below. 


Form  L9-50m-7,'54(5990)444 


TMI  \KY 

OF  CALIFORNIA 
LOS  ANGELES