Monday, 27 June 2016

Poem ~ Somme Optimism - Tuesday, 27 June - 1916


Source: File: British Artillery, end of June 1916. National Army Museum. [online] See an original image at: <https://ww1live.wordpress.com/category/western-front/> [Accessed: 27 June 2016]

French roads from all ports to Arras and Albert
Buzzed - a Lieutenant Liveing commented
On packed roads, loaded with war articles;
Sandbags, wire stakes, shells, trench mortar
Bombs with  'a thousand articles for offensive.'

Lieutenant Liveing had witnessed the great
Movements of lorry columns, thundering
Along, with signalers who weaved their
Motorbikes among them, as full staff cars,
Frustrated, were slowed by the military traffic.

Ceaselessly rolling by were batteries moving
To their positions, as caterpillar transports
Heaved out the heaviest guns - endless
Lines of intent troopers and khaki sappers,
Moving out to assigned tasks across the lines.

Surprise came with gauge railways apparently
Appearing over night - trees everywhere cut
Down for building of gun emplacements
And dugouts - while miles of water pipes were
Laid, ready to be extended out across battlefields.

Lieutenant Liveing told how miles of telephone
Lines were being laid down into earth, while
Amidst greenery dumps of ammunition
Bloomed - not to forget electric generators 
Power readied and wells dug to feed pipelines.

Such grand ambition of the operation could
Not go unnoticed by the side opposite.
Lieutenant Steele, a Newfoundland
Soldier described on 21 June, in equal
Manner, that Fritz was seen to be very busy.

Over hours, night and day the Germans
Worked - under darkness reinforcing
Wires - in theory their efforts had
Little matter, in total annihilation they
Would be crushed by a creeping barrage.

The fact of warning signs were being missed
By British, captured Germans questioned
Stating how their men were sheltered
In deep bunkers - solid British belief had
Decided; nothing could survive bombardment.

A coded alphabet countdown had marked
24 June as U day - but thunderstorms
Of 23 June developed into a dull
Day of heavy rain - this then continued 
The thunderous air of deadly British batteries.

The following day, 25 June being marked
As V day gave bright warm sun, there
Was no let up - enemy dumps
Reported to have exploded by RFC
Pilots, who shot down enemy balloons.

With W day 26 June intervals of sun were
Interrupted by heavy rain - operations
In cutting enemy wires were good -
500 shells fired by every single gun over
Each day; the countdown moves on a day.

Still hefty rain tumbles down by 27 June,
Day X - shells pummel chalky ground
Adding to dank mist of the Somme -
The storms of steel continue to add
To waiting enemy’s sombre entrapment.

Only at Loos had such concentration
Of gunnery exploded at the enemy.
Now the fourth army held twice
As many guns; 32 4.7'' guns against
12 at Loos - 36 6' Howitzers now 104.

The thunderous roll carried northwards
Across the western front as a Royal
Fusilier Officer, Stanley Spencer,
Told of a sky, lit by flashes to cause
Earth below to rise, fall and shudder.

Evidence of sound and deadly sights
Could have not been previously
Imagined - darkness slashed 
By hesitant lights - any grounded
Object, a flickering chaotic silhouette.

One bright slash of light against another.
Stark flashes emitted from crashing
Shells in a violent competition -
Those cursing cries of explosions,
Carried by wind to be heard in London.

Shell after shell after shell, fired in all
Capacities - the spent canisters
Discarded into thrown metal
Mountains; useless heaps of husks.
Order kept by officers with neat charts.

An observer, American war Journalist
Frederick Palmer, compared sight
Of cost - one shell that killed
Could give funds to send a youth
To college for a year, or raise a child.

Any act of extravagance was curtailed,
As every shell was accounted for -
How by the end of one day,
The simmering crop of spent shells
Could have funded a maternity hospital.

by Jamie Mann.

Source: File:  The Great War 1914-1918. The Battle of the Somme, 1916. Online. Available at: <http://www.greatwar.co.uk/battles/somme-1916/> [Accessed 27 June 2016]

Source: File: The Long, Long trail. The British Army In The Great War of 1914-1918. Logistical preparations necessary before the Somme offensive, 1916. Online. Available at: <http://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/battles/battles-of-the-western-front-in-france-and-flanders/the-battles-of-the-somme-1916/logistical-preparations-necessary-before-the-somme-offensive-1916/> [Accessed 27 June 2016]

Source: File: WWI Centennial: Somme Bombardment Begins. Online. Available at: <http://mentalfloss.com/article/82214/wwi-centennial-somme-bombardment-begins> [Accessed 27 June 2016]

WWI Centennial: Somme Bombardment Begins

Mann, J., 2016. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 27 June 2016). 


#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #WW1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered #WW1Somme

No comments:

Post a Comment