Thursday 25 February 2016

Poem ~ Yorkshires Seek Prisoner - Friday, 25 February - Saturday, 26 February 1916


Impression sketch for Yorkshires Seek Prisoner - by Jamie

As rumours go, based on truth,
Was story of Canadian troopers,
Taking up the hobby of dipping
Into trenches - making short
A shift of work returning home,
To convey a prisoner or two.

In liking for a type of such Red Indian
Warfare, there were also others; young
British officers who, being itchy all day
For the night to come, when time allowed
Night patrols in their moving out to wire.

Another rumour in the then
Trenches of Yorkshire lads,
Was their general's pleasure,
To bring a prisoner to him -
A proposal of a sortie was
Soon discussed in dug outs.

One non commissioned officer
In league with an eager sergeant,
Formulated their idea into a plan.
Completed by four lieutenants,
Who set to find their volunteers.

Included was one private
With a waggish humour
And roguish eyes - two
Parties after dark found
Yards equal to miles, with
The dead earth lit by flares.

At intervals of regularity came
A sudden whoosh, as rockets
Flared the dark - with sudden
Stark white lights, the parapets
And wire made stark silhouettes.

Beneath the harsh lit
White, crawling forms
Of Yorkshire men halted -
Pressing exposed selves
Downwards, into the spin
Of earth beneath them.

When darkness held them again,
They crawled on fingers - inch
By inch - following blindly the path
Of leading subalterns, towards
A gap of a curved enemy trench.

Between two bays that
Flashed in white relief,
The Yorkshires paused -
In the loop they listened
Intently, hearing a sentry
Stamping his cold feet.

The sentry paced back and forth,
For warmth he gave a quiet whistle.
His exhale patterning in harsh light
Of white flares where he thought
He was alone, unaware of English.

The Yorkshires lay close
To him, holding breathes,
Clasping revolvers - two
Lieutenants fingered way
To the parapet - behind
Men were left to instinct.

Any orders would alert the sentry;
One man led himself to clamber
Down into trench, only yards from
The sentry - as a wolf he tensed
For his prey, as footsteps came.

Moving in the dank sunk
Was a black form, marked
By glowing cigarette nub;
A German officer on rounds.
The man leapt away, his
Feet hung over the trench.

With legs lying in open air, head
Towards British lines - the officer's
Passing cloak, gently stroked his
Heels - the lad twisted in tension,
To see the German go on his way.

Close by, the lonely
Sentry made a  whistle,
A tune of home to try
And cheer his isolation,
When the alert of a click
Changed everything.

One lieutenant aimed his gun
But the mud filled its mechanism,
So it could not fire - the sentry
Spun, his whistle became a gasp -
Now he was blind with terror.

To fall from the parapet
Was a British sergeant -
Before him the boy sentry
Suddenly shrieked with
A yell - an English hand
About his German throat.

The fingers were trying to strangle
Him - he struggled when a second
Englishman an officer, was before
Him - to hold a cold barrel against his
Neck, to feel thump of a dud revolver.

The first officer sought
To knock him out, while
A trigger squeezed and
Blew away the sentry’s
Life - the same bullet also
Shot the sergeant's hand.

Now all alarm was raised - attempts
To gain any prisoner was lost, with
Thuds of German boots, hurrying 
To a lost rescue of their fellow sentry;
The raiding party scrambled away.

Over the slimy parapet
they fell into a watery ditch -
All attempts were to race
For their home trench -
Under the white flares
And heel snapping bullets.

The split of two parties had found
The other Yorkshire group troubled,
To find their way across a sodden
Ditch - they came against enemy
Wire, slowed down by making a gap.

In breaking through
The leaders split - the
Sergeant to the left
Lieutenants to right -
Their men close behind
To creep forwards.

In the target bay the sergeant soon
Discovered two German sentries,
Whose alert facial status prompted
Him to throw them a grenade -
The noisome result looked to work.

From a dugout two
Germans appeared
Into the smoky hole -
The sergeant sent
Another bomb, when
More soldiers came.

Making for a sharp exit - along
With him the party crouched,
As the enemy flung bombs
Towards them - only to realise
Their lieutenant was missing.

Turning back to find
Him, the sergeant saw
From out of the dark,
A shadow lift  - a flare
Burst revealed a white
Face, a result of wounds.

Despite a bayonet neck injury
And shrapnel hit, the Lieutenant
Lead the party back to safety -
Only one left of their number had
A delay; the grinning eyed man.

Lying in a ditch,
The Yorkshire man
Maintained calm -
Although caught
By the enemy wire,
Expectant of death.

Certain that his bombs had
Killed a number of the Hun,
He tried to get free of the trap.
His boots were caught - only by
Removing them he might get out.

Feeling that they
Were very good
Boots, he could
Not part with them -
Twisting once, then
Again he was free.

Both parties returned in safety,
Despite a lack of any prisoner
There were no regrets in giving
The Germans the jumps - which
Continued over consecutive nights.

Apparently seeing
Shadows, the Hun 
Habitually tossed
Bombs at their  
Own barbed wire; 
To humor the Yorks.

by Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1916. Daring Yorkshires - 'No Man's Land' Exploit. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 25 February 1916. P.9. Col.2. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/12169037/Daily-Telegraph-February-24-1916.html [Accessed: 25 February 2016].



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