Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Poem ~ Fighting in the Hills - Thursday, 27 August 1914


From a field hospital a wounded French soldier,
Makes correspondence to his London friend.
Describing how he arrived there, and how
A hole has appeared now his left shoulder.
Praising the patient nurses who never tire,
But just smile back and make a comic reply.
He starts his account, in mellow mourning; 
Replacing his journalistic pen for a rifle -
Which can be as sharp as a bayonet.

His civilian occupation has led him to
Experience battle as both soldier and journalist.
On that day the army, of which he is a part,
Marched upon a cultivated plain - on either flank
The field being dotted with groups of harvesters.
Girls and old men, creating scenery of peace,
Amid rolling land of hills and wooded crests,
Marching, marching kilometre upon Kilometre,
Forms a snaking line of fighting men.

Atop one hill this French man looks back
To see the serpent, of which he is apart.
Their colour's are not just for show,
But a force going to war because they wish to.
Being ‘A superhuman power of determination.’
Each solder having everything he needs,
To keep his spirit high. Then a dust cloud
To their left flank, rises up and they hear
Sounds of moving troops and horses hooves.

A Parallel marching troop,
Which they glimpse through the field crops.
Muttered rumours pass between them.
They are surely the British. But French officers
Do not disclose if they are British, French
Or Belgian - only that they are their allies.
The landscape about, starts to darken,
With dispatch riders hurrying by them -
Now come orders to quicken their march.

Part of the Serpent army suddenly divides off
To marches across a pasture land.
The rattling of gunfire has been growing
For a time - then the clearer thud -
Thud of artillery. More dispatch riders
Coming from the battle scene,
Meet their officers in a kicking up of dust.

Now our man hurries across a grass field,
Reaching a crest of a hill, to drop flat,
Viewing the hill opposite, where a keen fight
Is on between enemy and an allied division. 
Shapes of German artillery-men move like toys
Quickly operating their artillery gun –
The gun sends out a flash, the sound
Re echoes in the hills. Our Frenchman
Feels he is a spectator and others too,
As they too look to see where that shell has fallen.

It is like a grand outdoor theatre,
With them lying prone as a curious audience.
The surreal situation causes humour, which
To any other than the soldier sounds ill at ease –
The barks of orders are made to return fire.
So volley after volley is made at the enemy’s stand
Our man notes Germans are good at parades,
But they are bad shooters - bullets and shells fly
Past over their heads.  After a time
The French heavy guns join the maelstrom,
As reinforcements come up behind.

Our Frenchman is in the front line,
Ordered to race for the plain ahead.
He lifts to stoop into the raining bullets.
When hearing the whizzing sound,
Means the bullet has already passed.
Therefore the metal hits in silence.
Within the depth of the hailing,
Comes over him a feeling like a fever.

Dropping then lifting to rush forward again -
Nerves on edge as time is stretched.
The earth shakes, quaking the body -
As the air blazes in rattling rifle fire.
To his right a man is shot through the chest
Dropping without a sound - then to the front
Of him a man throws up his arms,
Falls, gets up again, but falls again,
Calling out his last words.

The Frenchman finds the rush
To take the ground surrounded by dykes
Is gained. There comes the blast of a shell,
And five men lay dead. A man without legs
Cries out to die, a moving officer stops
To look at him, then shoots him in the heart.
The officer, about to make a command,
Is promptly shot through the mouth.
Spinning twice he falls across a dyke.

At a distance Red Cross soldiers stoop,
Through the wounded, lifting them to an ambulance.
A shell explodes – only two of them are left.
Casualties lay about in the green grass  -
Then a French voice calls out the retreat.
Our French man makes his way back,
Glancing to a German battery, which turns
To aim at them, but is hit simultaneously
By two shells and is then swept away.

There is a pause and they turn back,
To inflict more fire upon the enemy.
Finding some calmness in the carnage,
He lifts his rifle to any moving, living target.
With each bullet fired he looks for a second
To see the resulting effect of a falling man.

The numbers of enemy are still too great
So the retreat is made, running from the plain,
Back to a hill where he reaches a crest,
To feel a slight shock in the left shoulder.
Moving on there comes a burning pain,
And the arm becomes heavy – he is wounded.

Some time later, finds himself, in a field hospital
Happy to be attended to by a keen nurse,
Who, to stop him writing in order to eat,
Threatens him with punishment.
Our Frenchman wonders what that might be.

by Jamie Mann

Anon., 1914. Soldier's Story of a Terrible Fight - Grim Incidents - Heroic Nurses. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 27 Aug. p.8. Col.5. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/11034852/Daily-Telegraph-August-27-1914.html [Accessed: 27th August 2014].

Mann, J., 2014. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 27 August 2014). 



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