From the Francis Brett Young Society |
Beside old barrows, and the wet
White chalk we shovelled from below;
It lay in drifts of thawing snow
On prados and parapet:
Until a pick neither struck flint
Nor split the yielding chalky soil,
But only calcined human bone :
Poor relic of that Age of Stone
Whose ossuary was our spoil.
Home we marched singing in the rain,
And all the while, beneath our song,
I mused how many springs should wane
And still our trenches scar the plain:
The monument of an old wrong.
But then, I thought, the fair green sod
Will wholly cover that white stain,
And soften, as it clothes the face
Of those old barrows, every trace
Of violence to the patient plain.
And careless people, passing by
Will speak of both in casual tone:
Saying: "You see the toil they made:
The age of iron, pick and spade,
Here jostles with the Age of Stone."
Yet either from that happier race
Will merit but a passing glance;
And they will leave us both alone:
Poor savages who wrought in stone-
Poor savages who fought in France.
Francis Brett Young (1884 - 1954)
2 comments:
Crikey! That was like a trip in Dr. Who's time machine! Straight back 50+ years to Salisbury Plain and trying to dig a trench in that bloody chalk!
It chimed with me too - for a different and more recent reason - bricks and lumps of concrete in our garden soil!
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