Monday, 29 September 2014

Poem ~ Night Fighting on the Aisne - Tuesday, 29 September 1914


From a Battalion of the Royal Irish Fusiliers,
A Lance-corporal recounts a night attack
On the Aisne. After a hard day in the trenches
The men were tired and wet to the skin.
So in order to dry out tunics they lit fires.

All at once came flashing firing along the line,
And like ‘mad-men’ Germans rushed
Forward, from out of the darkness.
The Fusiliers fought back in shirtsleeves.
Close proximity made hand-to-hand combat,
Very hard work, in employment of bayonets.

In darkness the enemy, supported by cavalry
Who charged in force to run them down.
The Fusiliers held them off, until support
Of infantry and allied cavalry arrived,
And succeeded in driving them away.

During the fight a competition occurred,
Between Lancer regiment and Battalion,
As to who could get at the Germans first.
Despite the Irish Battalion lack of horses,
They won in the end - running at German
Hordes with trained shouting and bayonets.

Then the Lancers followed and the Germans,
Were cleared away from their front line.
Worse was still to follow for the French.
The Germans, back in strength, had massed,
Across a front position, where they faced
A mass of French infantry, who now advanced.

In the night, at the double, made for the enemy,
But suddenly German batteries opened up,
From the shelter of woods - letting loose
With shrapnel showers and machine guns.
The long French line wavered and contracted.

This corporal saw the worst sight with sounds,
Of shells slicing through the close packed
French ranks - Men went down like grass,
Under a scythe - a hundred fell and more
Until the mass opened up in extended order.

The French still rushed at the enemy guns,
Despite at each step under heavy attack,
By relentless German cavalry and infantry
Until finally the French silenced the guns.

by Jamie Mann.
Anon.,1914. Battle Stories - Fight with Bayonets - Silencing the Guns. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 29 September. p.5. Col.4. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/11124060/Daily-Telegraph-September-29-1914.html [Accessed: 29th September 2014].
Mann, J., 2014. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 29th September 2014). 

#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #ww1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered 

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