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<h2> Wounded </h2>
<p>Is it not strange? A year ago to-day,<br/>
With scarce a thought beyond the hum-drum round,<br/>
I did my decent job and earned my pay;<br/>
Was averagely happy, I'll be bound.<br/>
Ay, in my little groove I was content,<br/>
Seeing my life run smoothly to the end,<br/>
With prosy days in stolid labour spent,<br/>
And jolly nights, a pipe, a glass, a friend.<br/>
In God's good time a hearth fire's cosy gleam,<br/>
A wife and kids, and all a fellow needs;<br/>
When presto! like a bubble goes my dream:<br/>
I leap upon the Stage of Splendid Deeds.<br/>
I yell with rage; I wallow deep in gore:<br/>
I, that was clerk in a drysalter's store.<br/>
<br/>
Stranger than any book I've ever read.<br/>
Here on the reeking battlefield I lie,<br/>
Under the stars, propped up with smeary dead,<br/>
Like too, if no one takes me in, to die.<br/>
Hit on the arms, legs, liver, lungs and gall;<br/>
Damn glad there's nothing more of me to hit;<br/>
But calm, and feeling never pain at all,<br/>
And full of wonder at the turn of it.<br/>
For of the dead around me three are mine,<br/>
Three foemen vanquished in the whirl of fight;<br/>
So if I die I have no right to whine,<br/>
I feel I've done my little bit all right.<br/>
I don't know how—but there the beggars are,<br/>
As dead as herrings pickled in a jar.<br/>
<br/>
And here am I, worse wounded than I thought;<br/>
For in the fight a bullet bee-like stings;<br/>
You never heed; the air is metal-hot,<br/>
And all alive with little flicking wings.<br/>
<i>BUT ON YOU CHARGE.</i> You see the fellows fall;<br/>
Your pal was by your side, fair fighting-mad;<br/>
You turn to him, and lo! no pal at all;<br/>
You wonder vaguely if he's copped it bad.<br/>
<i>BUT ON YOU CHARGE.</i> The heavens vomit death;<br/>
And vicious death is besoming the ground.<br/>
You're blind with sweat; you're dazed, and out of breath,<br/>
And though you yell, you cannot hear a sound.<br/>
<i>BUT ON YOU CHARGE.</i> Oh, War's a rousing game!<br/>
Around you smoky clouds like ogres tower;<br/>
The earth is rowelled deep with spurs of flame,<br/>
And on your helmet stones and ashes shower.<br/>
<i>BUT ON YOU CHARGE.</i> It's odd! You have no fear.<br/>
Machine-gun bullets whip and lash your path;<br/>
Red, yellow, black the smoky giants rear;<br/>
The shrapnel rips, the heavens roar in wrath.<br/>
<i>BUT ON YOU CHARGE.</i> Barbed wire all trampled down.<br/>
The ground all gored and rent as by a blast;<br/>
Grim heaps of grey where once were heaps of brown;<br/>
A ragged ditch—the Hun first line at last.<br/>
All smashed to hell. Their second right ahead,<br/>
<i>SO ON YOU CHARGE.</i> There's nothing else to do.<br/>
More reeking holes, blood, barbed wire, gruesome dead;<br/>
(Your puttee strap's undone—that worries you).<br/>
You glare around. You think you're all alone.<br/>
But no; your chums come surging left and right.<br/>
The nearest chap flops down without a groan,<br/>
His face still snarling with the rage of fight.<br/>
Ha! here's the second trench—just like the first,<br/>
Only a little more so, more "laid out";<br/>
More pounded, flame-corroded, death-accurst;<br/>
A pretty piece of work, beyond a doubt.<br/>
Now for the third, and there your job is done,<br/>
<i>SO ON YOU CHARGE.</i> You never stop to think.<br/>
Your cursed puttee's trailing as you run;<br/>
You feel you'd sell your soul to have a drink.<br/>
The acrid air is full of cracking whips.<br/>
You wonder how it is you're going still.<br/>
You foam with rage. Oh, God! to be at grips<br/>
With someone you can rush and crush and kill.<br/>
Your sleeve is dripping blood; you're seeing red;<br/>
You're battle-mad; your turn is coming now.<br/>
See! there's the jagged barbed wire straight ahead,<br/>
And there's the trench—you'll get there anyhow.<br/>
Your puttee catches on a strand of wire,<br/>
And down you go; perhaps it saves your life,<br/>
For over sandbag rims you see 'em fire,<br/>
Crop-headed chaps, their eyes ablaze with strife.<br/>
You crawl, you cower; then once again you plunge<br/>
With all your comrades roaring at your heels.<br/>
<i>HAVE AT 'EM, LADS!</i> You stab, you jab, you lunge;<br/>
A blaze of glory, then the red world reels.<br/>
A crash of triumph, then . . . you're faint a bit . . .<br/>
That cursed puttee! Now to fasten it. . . .<br/>
<br/>
Well, that's the charge. And now I'm here alone.<br/>
I've built a little wall of Hun on Hun,<br/>
To shield me from the leaden bees that drone<br/>
(It saves me worry, and it hurts 'em none).<br/>
The only thing I'm wondering is when<br/>
Some stretcher-men will stroll along my way?<br/>
It isn't much that's left of me, but then<br/>
Where life is, hope is, so at least they say.<br/>
Well, if I'm spared I'll be the happy lad.<br/>
I tell you I won't envy any king.<br/>
I've stood the racket, and I'm proud and glad;<br/>
I've had my crowning hour. Oh, War's the thing!<br/>
It gives us common, working chaps our chance,<br/>
A taste of glory, chivalry, romance.<br/>
<br/>
Ay, War, they say, is hell; it's heaven, too.<br/>
It lets a man discover what he's worth.<br/>
It takes his measure, shows what he can do,<br/>
Gives him a joy like nothing else on earth.<br/>
It fans in him a flame that otherwise<br/>
Would flicker out, these drab, discordant days;<br/>
It teaches him in pain and sacrifice<br/>
Faith, fortitude, grim courage past all praise.<br/>
Yes, War is good. So here beside my slain,<br/>
A happy wreck I wait amid the din;<br/>
For even if I perish mine's the gain. . . .<br/>
Hi, there, you fellows! WON'T you take me in?<br/>
Give me a fag to smoke upon the way. . . .<br/>
We've taken La Boiselle! The hell, you say!<br/>
Well, that would make a corpse sit up and grin. . . .<br/>
Lead on! I'll live to fight another day.<br/></p>
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