Sunday, 24 July 2016

Poem ~ Aussies at Pozieres - Monday, 24 July 1916 - Wednesday, 26 July 1916


Source: File: "Gibraltar" bunker, Pozières, in late August. A fatigue party laden with sandbags heads for the fighting at Mouquet Farm.  See an original image at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Pozières#/media/File:Gibraltar_bunker_Pozieres_(AWM_EZ0098).jpg> [Accessed 24 July 2016]

Amid the failed objectives of 1 July 1916,
Stood the small French village of Pozieres -
Not yet to be forgotten - delayed scheduled
Full-on attacks would resurge by mid month.

Situated on another Somme ridge, this
Village lay on the road between Bapaume
And Albert - houses clustered about one
Long straight road with a lone windmill.

Once a Roman way was deserted
In the presence of armies, that made
This their demarcation - here atop
Rolling ground lay the highest point.

This was where Pozieres windmill that
Caught high winds, to become Hill 60;
Just the slightest point of height could
Provide the advantage for artillery fire.

The German line had sliced the Somme
From Longueval, Bazentin Le Petite,
Over that ridge and behind Pozieres -
Intentions were for British to move east.

With this, Thiepval and Pozieres would
Prove too much for Germans to hold -
With focus on grounds between those
Communes of Ginchy and Guillemonth.

Along with High and Delville woods
An increased pressure would allow
A gain of Pozieres - by steady steps,
The fourth army made initial advance.

Over five days, 13 to 17 July, no gain
Was made, only high casualties, during
This the work of artillery pounded
The deserted French village into ruins.

Two attempts to take Pozieres trench
In a system from west to south failed -
While east attempts up the Old Geman
Lines also failed; a rethink was needed.

Decisions could have no hesitations,
General Rawlinson would send
Six divisions from south and north,
Down Guillemont and Albert road.

Initially scheduled for day 18 July,
Postponement took this to evening
Of 22 July, by two Generals situations;
Gough reserves, Walkers Australians.

In position of holding the road since
Before July, Lt General Gough known
As a 'thruster,' told M-General Walker
To attack Pozieres during coming night.

Leading the Australians after Gallipoli,
Walker locked horns - that his attack
Would happen only after preparations -
So a launch set in hours from 22-23 July.

Three stages to happen in half hours -
Minutes of the clock, to see 1st divisions
Of Australians form south, while from
West, South Midland division would move.

Pozieres took another bombardment,
To include tear and phosgene gas -
German 117th Infantry shells beat time,
As Australian brigades made preparations.

1st and 3rds behind artillery wall edged
Into No Mans land - as the shield lifted,
They rushed outwards to gain Pozieres
Trench in the south - onto a second stage.

Australians crept out through remnants
Of back gardens, to join with stage three
Down into Albert Road - while garrisons
Of Germans then moved east and north.

With matching moves and gains, words
On white paper set out a night attack -
Despite confusion over beaten ground,
German resistance came from old line.

An 18-year-old officer, Ian Fraser arrived
From Sandhurst to Somme, in admittance
Of fear from his age in leading others - his
Terror brewed in bombardment not to fail.

Then they moved with intermittent fear
Between bursts, as they were forced
To crawl under snipers fire - on northside
Of Pozieres Fraser led a bomb attack.

At some random point, a German rifle
Shot - intentional of specific target or
Not, knocked Fraser to the ground;
A bullet had passed through his head.

The small missile did its deed that
Destroyed both eyes - others acted
To dress him - Fraser even chatted
With his commander as they walked.

Later he recalled how he was laid
On a market type barrow, wheeled
Along for apparent miles down a shell
Damaged road - none of which he saw.

Some doctor gave him an injection, to
Write an indelible cross upon his fore-
Head. quizzed why? 'Oh just a sign that
You had anti-tetanus' - he lay still, blind.

A Chaplain of the Gloucesters, Dominic
Devas, appropriately at Crucifix Corner
Dressing station, saw tremendous howls
Of bombardment puckering night into light.

Devas assisted through the dark hours
As wounded gathered under the crucifix
Arms, until a fresh summer morning broke -
At Aveluy he gave mass to passing soldiers.

Das Blockhaus to be known as Gibraltar,
Was a bunker on the western side, which
Australians reached - lying thick with dead
Of the enemy, as wounded still piled up.

On the ground of the windmill lay concrete
Gibraltar, which found had new purpose
As HQ for 7th and 8th Australians - amid
The first, Private Bourke stepped inside.

Cake boxes lay in a corner, with an address
Written by a child - while evidence of a coat
Bloodied with shrapnel of a German wearer;
Saddened Bourke dwelt on the child's gifts.

By this date 23 July, Australian prospectors
Out on the road captured various Germans,
As some kind of hold was made on Pozieres -
The only gain on that date of German focus.

With all communication process hampered,
Only by the early morning of 24 July, gave
Realization that Pozieres was captured -
Attacks elsewhere faded, looking to Pozieres.

Continual but not intense, IV German corps
rearmed their guns, targeting head on Sausage
Valley towards Casualty Corner - thereafter
Called Dead Mans Road - for counter attacks.

By Jamie Mann.

Richardson, M., 2015. Eyewitness On The Somme 1916. Pen and Sword Books. Ch. 3

Source: File: Battle of Pozières. Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Available at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Pozières> [Accessed 19 July 2016]

Mann, J., 2016. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 19 July 2016). 


#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #WW1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered #WW1 Pozieres

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