Whenever war is spoken of
I find
The war that was called Great
invades the mind:
The grey militia marches over land
A darker mood
of grey
Where fractured tree-trunks stand
And shells, exploding,
open sudden fans
Of smoke and earth.
Blind murders scythe
The
deathscape where the iron brambles writhe;
The sky at night
Is
honoured with rosettes of fire,
Flares that define the corpses on the
wire
As terror ticks on wrists at zero hour.
These things I
see,
But they are only part
Of what it is that slyly probes the
heart:
Less vivid images and words excite
The sensuous
memory
And, even as I write,
Fear and a kind of love
collaborate
To call each simple conscript up
For quick
inspection:
Trenches' parapets
Paunchy with sandbags; bandoliers,
tin-hats.
Candles in dugouts,
Duckboards, mud and rats.
Then,
like patrols, tunes creep into the mind:
A long, long trail, The
Rose of No-Man's Land,
Home Fire and Tipperary:
And
through the misty keening of a band
Of Scottish pipes the proper names
are heard
Like fateful commentary of distant guns:
Passchendaele,
Bapaume, and Loos, and Mons.
And now,
Whenever the November
sky
Quivers with a bugle's hoarse, sweet cry,
The reason darkens; in
its evening gleam
Crosses and flares, tormented wire, grey
earth
Splattered with crimson flowers,
And I remember,
Not the
war I fought in
But the one called Great
Which ended in a sepia
November
Four years before my birth.