Authors: Vivien Noakes
The Hospital Ship
There is a green-lit hospital ship,
Green, with a crimson cross,
Lazily swaying there in the bay,
Lazily bearing my friend away,
Leaving me dull-sensed loss.
Green-lit, red-lit hospital ship,
Numb is my heart, but you carelessly dip
There in the drift of the bay.
There is a green-lit hospital ship,
Dim as the distance grows,
Speedily steaming out of the bay,
Speedily bearing my friend away
Into the orange-rose.
Green-lit, red-lit hospital ship,
Dim are my eyes, but you heedlessly slip
Out of their sight from the bay.
* * *
There was a green-lit hospital ship,
Green, with a blood-red cross,
Lazily swaying there in the bay,
But it went out with the light of the day –
Out where the white seas toss.
Green-lit, red-lit hospital ship,
Cold are my hands and trembling my lip:
Did you make home from the bay?
W.H. Littlejohn
The Blizzard
Suvla, November 27, 1915
The night was dark as hell-mouth, the wind was bitter cold,
And there was little comfort in a sodden blanket rolled.
A foot or more of water, an inch or two of mud
Was what we had to walk in before came down – the flood.
It caught the shivering sentries along the parapet,
The front trench was abrim before they knew that they were wet,
Full seven feet deep the trenches were, the men were weighted down
With kit and ammunition, and mostly had to drown.
Behind was soon no better, a million tons of rain
Came swirling thro’ the section by dug-out, sap and drain,
Headquarters, store and cook-house, bomb-shelter, splinter-proof,
Were all filled up with water, and in fell every roof.
Scummy and dark and icy, the torrent at a touch
Sucked in the greasy trench-walls that mocked the drowning clutch.
And now the land was covered, and now with choking breath
The wretched victims unawares stepped into hidden death.
Behind the up-flung parados – half buried in the slime,
Their fingers numb and useless – their rifles choked with grime.
Thro’ thirty hours of darkness and twenty hours of day,
Foodless and drinkless (save the mark), a frozen handful lay.
My friends at home – at breakfast you saw a casual hint
Of half a quarter of the truth in seven lines of print.
But somewhere in the sullen sky that seemed to mock our woes
God saw my soldiers freeze and drown. It is enough. He knows.
F.W.D. Bendall
The Unburied
Now snowflakes thickly falling in the winter breeze
Have cloaked alike the hard, unbending ilex
And the grey, drooping branches of the olive trees,
Transmuting into silver all their lead;
And, in between the winding lines, in No-Man’s Land,
Have softly covered with a glittering shroud
The unburied dead.
And in the silences of night, when winds are fair,
When shot and shard have ceased their wild surprising,
I hear a sound of music in the upper air,
Rising and falling till it slowly dies –
It is the beating of the wings of migrant birds
Wafting the souls of these unburied heroes
Into the skies.
Evacuation of Gallipoli
Not only muffled is our tread to cheat the foe.
We fear to rouse our honoured dead to hear us go.
Sleep sound, old friends – the keenest smart
Which, more than failure, wounds the heart
Is thus to leave you – thus to part.
Comrades, farewell!!
Alfred Leslie Guppy
Mudros after the Evacuation
I laughed to see the gulls that dipped to cling
To the torn edge of surge and blowing spray,
Where some gaunt battleship, a rolling king,
Still dreams of phantom battles in the bay.
I saw a cloud, a full-blown cotton flower
Drift vaguely like a wandering butterfly,
I laughed to think it bore no pregnant shower
Of blinding shrapnel scattered from the sky.
Life bore new hope. An army’s great release
From a closed cage walled in by fire and sea,
From the hushed pause and swooping plunge of shells,
Sped in a night. Here children in strange peace,
Seek solitude to dull the tragedy
And needless horror of the Dardanelles.
Geoffrey Dearmer
The Graves of Gallipoli
The herdman wandering by the lonely rills
Marks where they lie on the scarred mountain’s flanks,
Remembering that wild morning when the hills
Shook to the roar of guns and those wild ranks
Surged upward from the sea.
None tends them. Flowers will come again in spring,
And the torn hills and those poor mounds be green.
Some bird that sings in English woods may sing
To English lads beneath – the wind will keep
Its ancient lullaby.
Some flower that blooms beside the Southern foam
May blossom where our dead Australians lie,
And comfort them with whispers of their home;
And they will dream, beneath the alien sky,
Of the Pacific Sea.
‘Thrice happy they who fell beneath the walls,
Under their father’s eyes’, the Trojan said,
‘Not we who die in exile where who falls
Must lie in foreign earth.’ Alas! our dead
Lie buried far away.
Yet where the brave man lies who fell in fight
For his dear country, there his country is.
And we will mourn them proudly as of right –
For meaner deaths be weeping and loud cries:
They died pro patria!
Oh, sweet and seemly so to die, indeed,
In the high flush of youth and strength and pride.
These are our martyrs, and their blood the seed
Of nobler futures. ’Twas for us they died.
Keep we their memory green.
This be their epitaph. ‘Traveller, south or west,
Go, say at home we heard the trumpet call,
And answered. Now beside the sea we rest.
Our end was happy if our country thrives:
Much was demanded. Lo! our store was small –
That which we had we gave – it was our lives.’
Gallipoli – In Memoriam
There is a barren and forbidding shore
Where blue waves lap a narrow sand-strewn strand,
Where spirits shall keep guard for evermore
O’er fifty thousand heroes of our land.
There winds and waters ever chant the fame
And matchless valour of that dauntless band,
And generations yet shall laud their name
Whose death enriched the glory of our land.
Steep rocky cliffs that wild goat feared to climb
These valiant warriors scaled and met their foe,
Amid those rocks with bravery sublime
They fought and fell. Now o’er the sands below –
Those golden sands that saw their life-blood drain –
The restless ocean rolls at full of tide,
And sea waves sob and throb their sad refrain
To Britain’s heroes, lying side by side.
Will Leslie
Mesopotamian Alphabet
was an Apple that grew so they say, | |
is the Biscuit that’s made in Delhi, It breaks your teeth and bruises your belly, And grinds your intestines into a jelly, In the land of Mesopotamia. | |
is the poor old Indian Corps, Which went to France and fought in the war, Now it gathers the crops and fights no more In the land of Mesopotamia. | |
is the Digging we’ve all of us done Since first we started to fight the Hun, By now we’ve shifted ten thousand ton Of matter in Mesopotamia. | |
was the Energy shown by the Staff Before the much-advertised Hanna strafe, Yet the nett result was the Turks had a laugh At our Staff in Mesopotamia. | |
stands for ‘Fritz’ who flies in the sky, To bring down the brute we’ve had many a try, But the shells we shoot with all pass him by And fall in Mesopotamia. | |
is the Grazing we do all the day, We fervently hope that some day we may Get issued again with a ration of hay, ’Though we’re still in Mesopotamia. | |
are the Harems, which it appears Have flourished in Baghdad for hundreds of years, We propose to annex all the destitute dears – When their husbands leave Mesopotamia. | |
is the Indian Government, but About this I’m told I must keep my mouth shut, For it’s all due to them that we failed to reach Kut- El-Amara in Mesopotamia. | |
is the Jam, with the label that lies, And states that in Paris it won the First Prize, But out here we use it for catching the flies That swarm in Mesopotamia. | |
are the Kisses from lips sweet and fair, Waiting for us around Leicester Square When we wend our way home, after wasting a year Or two in Mesopotamia. | |
is the Loot we hope we shall seize – Wives and wine and bags of rupees, When the Mayor of Baghdad hands over the keys To the British in Mesopotamia. | |
is the local Mosquito, whose bite Keeps us awake all the hours of the night, And makes all our faces a horrible sight In the land of Mesopotamia. |