A Gloucestershire Lad
by
F. W. Harvey
Fourth Impression
London
Sidgwick & Jackson, Ltd.
1917
TO
ALL COMRADES OF MINE
WHO LIE DEAD IN FOREIGN FIELDS
FOR LOVE OF ENGLAND,
OR WHO LIVE TO PROSECUTE THE WAR
FOR ANOTHER ENGLAND
Most of these poems were written at the Front, and appeared in the Fifth Gloucester Gazette—the first paper ever published from the trenches.
The author was then a Lance-Corporal in the 5th Battalion of the Gloucestershire Regiment, and as such gained the Distinguished Conduct Medal in August, 1915.
The award appears as follows in the London Gazette—
F. W. Harvey.—“For conspicuous gallantry on the night of the 3rd-4th August, 1915, near Hebuterne, when, with a patrol, he and another Non-Commissioned Officer went out to reconnoitre in the direction of a suspected listening post. In advancing they encountered the hostile post evidently covering a working party in the rear. Corporal Knight at once shot one of the enemy, and, with Lance-Corporal Harvey, rushed the post, shooting two others, and assistance arriving the enemy fled. Lance-Corporal Harvey pursued, felling one of the retreating Germans with a bludgeon. He seized him, but finding his revolver empty and the enemy having opened fire, he was called back by Corporal Knight, and the prisoner escaped. Three Germans were killed and their rifles and a Mauser pistol were brought in. The patrol had no loss.”
[viii]The poems are written by a soldier and reflect a soldier’s outlook. Mud, blood and khaki are rather conspicuously absent. They are, in fact, the last things a soldier wishes to think or talk about.
What he does think of is his home.
Bishop Frodsham, preaching in Gloucester Cathedral, after visiting the Troops in France, quoted the following poem in a passage which admirably expresses the feelings of most of our fighting men.
“To suppose that these men enjoy the fighting would be sheer nonsense. The soldier does not want to go on killing and maiming Germans or Turks. He wants to get the dreadful war finished, so that he can get back to England again. But he wants the matter fought to a finish because he has seen in the villages and towns of France what German domination means. It has made him think furiously, as the French say. Many regiments and ships’ companies while away the impracticable hours by publishing little newspapers.
“The Fifth Gloucester Gazette is one of these journals. We are proud of the courage and the gaiety these little papers show. We laugh at their quips and jokes: then suddenly we find that the corners of our mouths are quivering[ix] and the tears are gathering in our eyes. We see that the boys are thinking about England below their gaiety. One young poet lifts the veil in this exquisite little rondeau—
That is perhaps the keynote of a book which the author has dedicated to all dead and living comrades who have loved England.
J. H. Collett, C.M.G., Colonel
Commanding the Fifth Battalion of the
Gloucestershire Regiment in France.
[x]
PAGE | |
PREFACE BY COLONEL J. H. COLLETT, C.M.G. | vii |
In Flanders | xv |
A SONG OF GLOUCESTERSHIRE | 1 |
BALLADE OF THE RICH HEART | 3 |
SONG OF MINSTERWORTH PERRY | 5 |
A GLOUCESTERSHIRE WISH AT EASTERTIDE | 6 |
SONG OF THE ROAD | 7 |
PIPER’S WOOD | 8 |
BALLADE OF RIVER SAILING | 9 |
SONG OF MINSTERWORTH | 11 |
CRICKET: THE CATCH | 13 |
WONDERS | 14 |
TRIOLET | 15 |
TRIOLET | 16 |
WHAT GOD SAID | 17 |
TO HIS MAID | 18 |
BALLADE OF DAMNABLE THINGS | 19 |
SONG OF HEALTH | 21 |
GRATITUDE | 22 |
THE SOLDIER SPEAKS | 23[xii] |
A PRESENT FROM FLANDERS | 24 |
IF WE RETURN | 25 |
A PEOPLE RENEWED | 26 |
THE AWAKENING | 27 |
THE RETURN | 28 |
LAND OF HEART’S DELIGHT | 29 |
GONNEHEM | 30 |
THE REST FARM | 31 |
BALLADE OF BEELZEBUB, GOD OF FLIES | 32 |
TO THE KAISER | 34 |
ROBERT HERRICK SOLILOQUIZES ON THE C.O. | 36 |
THE THREE PADRES | 37 |
WALT WHITMAN DESCRIBES MAJOR W. | 38 |
SERGEANT FINCH | 39 |
C COMPANY COOK | 40 |
EPITAPH | 41 |
SONNET | 42 |
THE FIRST SPRING DAY | 43 |
DEFIANCE | 45 |
THE ORCHARDS, THE SEA, AND THE GUNS | 46 |
DYING IN SPRING | 47[xiii] |
VICTORY | 48 |
DEATH THE REVEALER | 49 |
F. W. H. | 50 |
POETRY | 51 |
PROSE POEMS— | |
1. HEAVEN | 52 |
2. THE MOTH | 53 |
3. THE ARTIST | 54 |
4. THE WINDOW GLASS | 55 |
5. IN THE FIELD OF TIME | 56 |
6. BLUE GRASS | 57 |
7. THE POET | 58 |
8. SORROW | 59 |
9. THE MIRACLE | 60 |
10. FAITH | 61 |
11. TIME—THE HORSE | 62 |
12. THE REBUILDING OF REALITY | 63 |
13. THE TOKEN | 64 |
[xiv]
(Dedicated to the Gloucestershire Society)
Air: “The Vicar of Bray”
[1] The ancient name of the parish was Mortune—that is, the village in the mere; and the name was changed to Minsterworth early in the fourteenth century because it belonged to the Minster or Abbey of Gloucester, and was the Minster’s “Worth” or farm where the cattle were kept.—F. W. H.
(Rondeau)
(Confidentially)
(Acrostics)
[2] Fifth Gloucester Gazette. See Introduction.
(T. D., 13/3/16)
(To H. M.)
(To A. E. S.)
(A Portrait)
“Take me, then,” he said to the angel, “upon this great journey to Heaven.”
The angel touched his eyelids.
“Where, then, is Hell?” asked the man.
The spirit pointed out a bored-looking man quite near the throne.
“But he is in Heaven,” protested the mortal.
“Even so, but he does not know it,” replied the angel.
[53]
“It is the brightness of God!” exclaimed the moth, beholding the candle.
“But it will scorch you worse than Hell’s fire,” warned a friendly insect.
“What matter that?” shouted the moth. “It is the brightness of God!”
Then it flew into the flame and was shrivelled.
[54]
“I am tired of failing!” said the Artist, and he ripped up the picture with his penknife.
“Now he will remember my love!” thought the woman, and she smiled. But when the Artist saw the smile on her face, he took his brushes and made a picture of it, and the love of the woman was forgotten.
[55]
Against the dark glass shone like a flower the mouth of his beloved. But in vain he pressed lips of fire upon the panes—in vain!
“Then, since Love may not melt,” cried he, “shatter, O Death!”
God broke the window with His fist.
[56]
In the field of Time, at the end of the path of daisies, grow flaming poppies, taking the eye more readily than the flowers of gold and white.
But a man, looking at some he had plucked to wear, discovered (formed by the inside shape and hue of the petals) a black cross at the bottom of every scarlet cup, and cast them from him.
[57]
“Is not this the mountain of blue grass?” asked the stranger. “Why is the grass as green as in our common meadows?”
“It was never any other colour,” said the native.
“It looked blue from afar,” protested the traveller, “and I have journeyed a long and difficult way to find it.”
“You had better have stayed at home,” answered the native.
“No,” returned the stranger, with a sad smile, “I had better have come, but now I will go home. The grass there has become blue.”
[58]
“What is that lovely thing you have in your heart? Why do you not sing of it?” asked the Muse.
“I have not yet lost it,” answered the Poet.
[59]
The lean dagger had gone into the Poet’s heart.
Shuddering, he plucked it free, lest he should die. And then—by magic—it became in his hand a shining sword fit to smite down the sorrow of the world.
[60]
Why has the Earth taken on a new significance?
Why is the smoking mist now white music, and the world’s architecture more wonderful than a fine cathedral?
It is something that has happened in your heart.
Perhaps (I do not know) you have learnt to hate yourself or to love a fellow-being.
[61]
Why am I so many men?
It is because you have not Faith.
What is Faith?
Faith is a fire.
But how does a man come by it?
Perhaps God gives it him.
[62]
Whither does Time trot us? And is moonlight brightening the harness buckles as when children play beneath the rugs, guessing “Where are we?” and father drives home—home—beneath the stars?
[63]
“Behold the sunshine, the green earth, the shining sea!” shouted my Eyes.
Said Heart: “Oh, I cannot; the realities I knew are gone! Death’s shadow is upon all this.”
“Well, it is yours to create realities anew,” smiled Death. “Hitherto (like the rest) you seem to have done it badly.”
[64]
Because of you I am insatiably curious about death.
Because of Him who imagined and made you I am able tranquilly to abide the time.
Shrivelled in His glory: scorched by His humour: because He has imagined and made you, I trust and am sure.
Printed in Great Britain by Richard Clay & Sons, Limited.
BRUNSWICK ST., STAMFORD ST., S.E., AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK.