Thursday, 30 April 2015

Poem ~ America: An Outside View - Friday, 30 April 1915


While Admiring the British stance, America wished to remain neutral - but for how long?
Impression sketch of 'I Didn't Raise My Boy To Be A Soldier" 1915 sheet music cover by Jamie Mann. Note: A popular song in the United States. the original image can be seen at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_entry_into_World_War_I#/media/File:IDidntRaiseMyBoyToBeASoldierCoverMorton.jpeg

Mr William Shepherd had something to say,
In the United Press of America, for the army
Of the English - on reporting from the British
Army Headquarters in Northern France.

The US impression is that Tommy Atkins,
Universal English soldier, then equalled
By John Bull – professional Tommy meets
non-professional John - whose arrival as
A pre war everyday citizen, now walked
European soil, in hundreds of thousands.

While Mr Kipling has sung plenty about
Tommy A, John B has yet to have a song;
The man who believes his castle is his
Home, the very belief that took him there.

John B is the man with a wife and child,
Who reads newspapers, has a garden
Who talks over politics and pays his tax.
This man who daily travels to the office,
All of which is done in times of peace.

It was possible to find with few minutes,
About the headquarters, this said man -
Equal to any readers neighbour, who was
A clerk, a conductor, a lawyer or fellow,
Who weeds a garden on a summer day.

William Shepherd told how he could find
Such a man in shade of a wooden cross;
In a nearby field cemetery, who came
Out to do a job, which he then finished.
Or on the street John Bull walks about
In khaki, to be armed with rifle or gun.

The castle is the living man's metaphor;
For everyman's home, be they Belgium,
French or English – the home is sacred
Shelter to be protected from enemies.

In simplistic viewpoints over volunteers,
Shepherd states how every man jack,
Of the hundreds and thousands, thought
It through before walking into the offices
Of recruitment asking for his army place.

The thought is no American can miss out,
On the thrill, gained in being among the
English army – he is his own man’ man
Dressed in English Khaki, while being
fully responsible to superiors; it is home.

Home, where all castle homes stand in
Jeopardy - The English John Bull seen
As a thinker - a man who can work out
Problems, beliefs or duty whose answer
Is to be a fully fledged khaki soldier.

William Shepherd warns against John B
Of Tommy A, always singing Tipperary,
Or ever ready for fight or frolicking - there
Is none of this - that awaits him at home;
John B is earnest in being there to fight.

The music will come with the job done.
William Shepherd found the thrill of elbow
Against elbow with the eager volunteer
Army of Britain - knowing there are two
Powers in the world with such army's;
Great Britain and the United States.

In witness to the past, long British winter
Were seen men in Derby and silk hats,
In short and long coats, in street shoes
And hunting boots, marching and drilling.
Those determined faces were now there,
Wearing caps, loyal to the Kings Khaki.

The English army at the Front are there
Because they wanted to be  - because
Forces in themselves and determination,
Drives them - so the audience of American
People are told of the 1915 English soldier.

by Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1915. America’s View of Our New Army – Impressions at the Front. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 30 Apr. P.10. Col.3. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/11561799/Daily-Telegraph-April-30-1915.html [Accessed: 30 April 2015].

Mann, J., 2015. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 30 April 2015). 



#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #WW1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered  #WW1America

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