Friday, 13 February 2015

Poem ~ Fighting for Brickyards - Saturday, 13 February 1915


Source: File: British soldiers in the trenches in the La Bassee Canal Sector.jpg, 2015. 12:22, 31 July 2014 By Dailyrecord.co.uk. [online] Available at:<http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/world-war-one-anniversary-use-3941810> [Accessed: 13 February 2015].

''Destroyed bridge at La Bassee, France, during World War I. The canal runs diagonally across the photograph with remnants of the bridge still attached on the left bank. Three men stand on this side and look down into the canal surveying the ruins. The man-made skin of the canal and the debris can be clearly seen.''

Source: File: Canal at La Bassee, showing destroyed bridge.jpg, 2015.  First World War 'Official Photographs'  British Western Front  (16) V.25. [online] Available at:<http://digital.nls.uk/first-world-war-official-photographs/pageturner.cfm?id=74545918> [Accessed: 13 February 2015].

Grounds lost on 25 January - on right
Of the British - came to be regained,
In a General Headquarters account
For French and British movements.

Attacks

Friday 5 February the day was fine,
As English Howitzers began their work,
Setting alight enemy observations -
While aircraft of both sides occupied
Blue skies - Allies making chase
Of enemy craft, high above the Lille
Neighborhoods - In close quarters
They rattled at each other, to bring
The other down - With puncture
Wounds to both, the German craft
Made a hurried descent - two miles
Short of their own aerodrome.

Below in the brickfields, situated
South Of La Bassée Canal - in close
Proximity to Cuinchy - began
A night attack on 5th - to gain
Success on German sap-heads.
Then on the 6th, this new advantage
Made for advance  - from 2 p.m.
As French and British Artillery honed
Fire on the brick stacks, of close
German defences - and beyond.

The heaviest of allied Howitzers
Rained down upon the railway's
Triangle - From 20 miles distant 
The boom and shatter of shells,
Were heard - while beneath
The speed of shells, was both
Fearful and impressive - as debris
And smoke blurred the foul air.

After that barrage of 15 minutes
The British, from three sides,
Emerged to storm forth between
Stacks of bricks, upon the strong
Enemy defence - keeping under
Cover of choking dust, to capture
With little loss, taking prisoners
By greatest surprise -
While trenches between -
Slightly north - were also taken.

Gains

With these enemy points,
Take under possession - those
Forward fighters on the canal,
Kept a continual line southwards
And reformed their positions,
Before the brickfields.
British losses seemed less
Than Germans  - who had left
Seventy dead - while a mortar
And machine gun were taken,
With unwounded prisoners -
To number nineteen, along
With other, less wounded men.

Within the early hours of the 7th,
Germans would not be seen
To accept this situation, as they
Made a strategy along the bank
Of the canal - to shout out
'Don’t shoot we are engineers.'
This novelty being old - 
These false sappers soon came
Under held fire, faced a machine
Gun to fall back - to leave thirty
Of their dead before the line.

An afternoon attempt also
Suffered failure, to get to
Close quarters  - the artillery
Kept that enemy well at bay.
The artillery’s accuracy,
Was given heavy praise,
As one heavy German Battery
Was hit, to explode - and how
At only forty yards away,
The guns blew the Germans
From their ill-sited trenches.

Afterwards

As on February 6th, most casualties
Of the enemy were due to shellfire.
The grounds about, after 15 days
Of varied fights, had left enemy
Corpses littering the area -
Before crumbling of three brick stacks,
Constructions of barbed wire
Entanglements were easily made
In daylight, without being fired upon.

Little occurred over two further days,
While it was seen how the enemy
Relied on incendiary shelling,
To create damage to besieged towns -
As on Armentieres - in creations
Of candle packed projectiles
In celluloid wax, and phosphorus -
So flammable as to ignite in the sun.

To conclude, how amid all this,
Was made an act of humanity,
During fighting of Givenchy.
Partially buried by a fallen parapet,
Lay a British Officer, found by
A German Officer, who came to aid
Him - despite bullets about, stopped
And dug him out - passing him
His flask of brandy - and was then
Killed by a straying bullet.

by Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1915. Terrible Effects of British Howitzers -Storming a Brickfield - Gallant Charges by British Infantry -Heavy German Losses. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 13 Feb. P.9. Col.6. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/11406417/Daily-Telegraph-February-13-1915.html [Accessed: 13 February 2015].

Mann, J., 2015. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 13 February 2015). 



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