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- A SONG OF THE GUNS
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: A Song of the Guns
-
-Author: Gilbert Frankau
-
-Release Date: July 26, 2012 [EBook #40345]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SONG OF THE GUNS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover]
-
-
-
-
- A SONG OF THE GUNS
-
-
- BY
-
- GILBERT FRANKAU, R.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
- 1916
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY GILBERT FRANKAU
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- _Published April 1916_
-
-
-
- NOTE
-
-
-_A Song of the Guns_ was written under what are probably the most
-remarkable conditions in which a poem has ever been composed. The
-author, who is now serving in Flanders, was present at the battle of
-Loos, and during a lull in the fighting--when the gunners, who had been
-sleepless for five nights, were resting like tired dogs under their
-guns--he jotted down the main theme of the poem. After the battle the
-artillery brigade to which he was attached was ordered to Ypres, and it
-was during the long trench warfare in this district, within sight of the
-ruined tower of Ypres Cathedral, that the poem was finally completed.
-The last three stanzas were written at midnight in Brigade Headquarters
-with the German shells screaming over into the ruined town.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
-The Voice of the Slaves
-Headquarters
-Gun-Teams
-Eyes in the Air
-Signals
-The Observers
-Ammunition Column
-The Voice of the Guns
-
-
-
-
- A SONG OF THE GUNS
-
-
- These are our masters, the slim
- Grim muzzles that irk in the pit;
- That chafe for the rushing of wheels,
- For the teams plunging madly to bit
- As the gunners wing down to unkey,
- For the trails sweeping half-circle-right,
- For the six breech-blocks clashing as one
- To a target viewed clear on the sight--
- Gray masses the shells search and tear
- Into fragments that bunch as they run--
- For the hour of the red battle-harvest,
- The dream of the slaves of the gun!
-
- We have bartered our souls to the guns;
- Every fibre of body and brain
- Have we trained to them, chained to them. Serfs?
- Aye! but proud of the weight of our chain,
- Of our backs that are bowed to their workings,
- To hide them and guard and disguise,
- Of our ears that are deafened with service,
- Of hands that are scarred, and of eyes
- Grown hawklike with marking their prey,
- Of wings that are slashed as with swords
- When we hover, the turn of a blade
- From the death that is sweet to our lords.
-
-
-
-
- THE VOICE OF THE SLAVES
-
-
- _By the ears and the eyes and the brain,_
- _By the limbs and the hands and the wings,_
- _We are slaves to our masters the guns;_
- _But their slaves are the masters of kings!_
-
-
-
-
- HEADQUARTERS
-
-
- A league and a league from the trenches,
- from the traversed maze of the lines,--
- Where daylong the sniper watches and daylong the
- bullet whines,
- And the cratered earth is in travail with mines and
- with countermines,--
-
- Here, where haply some woman dreamed, (are
- those her roses that bloom
- In the garden beyond the windows of my littered
- working-room?)
- We have decked the map for our masters as a bride
- is decked for the groom.
-
- Here, on each numbered lettered square,--cross-road
- and mound and wire,
- Loophole, redoubt, and emplacement, are the targets
- their mouths desire,--
- Gay with purples and browns and blues, have we
- traced them their arcs of fire.
-
- And ever the type-keys clatter; and ever our keen
- wires bring
- Word from the watchers a-crouch below, word
- from the watchers a-wing;
- And ever we hear the distant growl of our hid guns
- thundering;
-
- Hear it hardly, and turn again to our maps, where
- the trench-lines crawl,
- Red on the gray and each with a sign for the
- ranging shrapnel's fall--
- Snakes that our masters shall scotch at dawn, as is
- written here on the wall.
-
- For the weeks of our waiting draw to a close....
- There is scarcely a leaf astir
- In the garden beyond my windows where the
- twilight shadows blur
- The blaze of some woman's roses....
- "Bombardment orders, sir."
-
-
-
-
- GUN-TEAMS
-
-
- Their rugs are sodden, their heads are down, their
- tails are turned to the storm.
- (Would you know them, you that groomed them
- in the sleek fat days of peace,--
- When the tiles rang to their pawings in the lighted
- stalls and warm,--
- Now the foul clay cakes on breeching-strap and
- clogs the quick-release?)
-
- The blown rain stings, there is never a star, the
- tracks are rivers of slime.
- (You must harness up by guesswork with a
- failing torch for light,
- Instep-deep in unmade standings, for it's active-service time,
- And our resting weeks are over, and we move
- the guns to-night.)
-
- The iron tires slither, the traces sag; their blind
- hooves stumble and slide;
- They are war-worn, they are weary, soaked with
- sweat and sopped with rain.
- (You must hold them, you must help them, swing
- your lead and centre wide
- Where the greasy granite pave peters out to
- squelching drain.)
-
- There is shrapnel bursting a mile in front on the
- road that the guns must take:
- (You are nervous, you are thoughtful, you are
- shifting in your seat,
- As you watch the ragged feathers flicker orange
- flame and break)--
- But the teams are pulling steady down the
- battered village street.
-
- You have shod them cold, and their coats are long,
- and their bellies gray with the mud;
- They have done with gloss and polish, but the
- fighting heart's unbroke.
- We, who saw them hobbling after us down white
- roads flecked with blood,
- Patient, wondering why we left them, till we
- lost them in the smoke;
-
- Who have felt them shiver between our knees,
- when the shells rain black from the skies,
- When the bursting terrors find us and the lines
- stampede as one;
- Who have watched the pierced limbs quiver and
- the pain in stricken eyes,
- Know the worth of humble servants, foolish-faithful
- to their gun!
-
-
-
-
- EYES IN THE AIR
-
-
- Our guns are a league behind us, our target a mile below,
- And there's never a cloud to blind us from the haunts of
- our lurking foe--
- Sunk pit whence his shrapnel tore us, support-trench
- crest-concealed,
- As clear as the charts before us, his ramparts lie revealed.
- His panicked watchers spy us, a droning threat in the void;
- Their whistling shells outfly us--puff upon puff, deployed
- Across the green beneath us, across the flanking grey,
- In fume and fire to sheathe us and balk us of our prey.
-
- Below, beyond, above her,
- Their iron web is spun!
- Flicked but unsnared we hover,
- Edged planes against the sun:
- Eyes in the air above his lair,
- The hawks that guide the gun!
-
- No word from earth may reach us save, white against the ground,
- The strips outspread to teach us whose ears are deaf to sound:
- But down the winds that sear us, athwart our engine's shriek,
- We send--and know they hear us, the ranging guns we speak.
- Our visored eyeballs show us their answering pennant, broke
- Eight thousand feet below us, a whirl of flame-stabbed smoke--
- The burst that hangs to guide us, while numbed gloved fingers
- tap
- From wireless key beside us the circles of the map.
-
- Line--target--short or over--
- Comes, plain as clock-hands run,
- Word from the birds that hover,
- Unblinded, tail to sun--
- Word out of air to range them fair,
- From hawks that guide the gun!
-
- Your flying shells have failed you, your landward guns are dumb:
- Since earth hath naught availed you, these skies be open! Come,
- Where, wild to meet and mate you, flame in their beaks for
- breath,
- Black doves! the white hawks wait you on the wind-tossed
- boughs of death.
- These boughs be cold without you, our hearts are hot for this,
- Our wings shall beat about you, our scorching breath shall kiss:
- Till, fraught with that we gave you, fulfilled of our desire,
- You bank,--too late to save you from biting beaks of fire,--
-
- Turn sideways from your lover,
- Shudder and swerve and run,
- Tilt; stagger; and plunge over
- Ablaze against the sun,--
- Doves dead in air, who clomb to dare
- The hawks that guide the gun!
-
-
-
-
- SIGNALS
-
-
- The hot wax drips from the flares
- On the scrawled pink forms that litter
- The bench where he sits; the glitter
- Of stars is framed by the sandbags atop of the dug-out stairs.
- And the lagging watch-hands creep;
- And his cloaked mates murmur in sleep,--
- Forms he can wake with a kick,--
- And he hears, as he plays with the pressel-switch, the strapped
- receiver click
- On his ear that listens, listens;
- And the candle-flicker glistens
- On the rounded brass of the switch-board where the red wires
- cluster thick.
-
- Wires from the earth, from the air;
- Wires that whisper and chatter
- At night, when the trench-rats patter
- And nibble among the rations and scuttle back to their lair;
- Wires that are never at rest,--
- For the linesmen tap them and test,
- And ever they tremble with tone:--
- And he knows from a hundred signals the buzzing call of his own,
- The breaks and the vibrant stresses,--
- The Z and the G and the S's
- That call his hand to the answering key and his mouth to the
- microphone.
-
- For always the laid guns fret
- On the words that his mouth shall utter,
- When rifle and Maxim stutter
- And the rockets volley to starward from the spurting parapet;
- And always his ear must hark
- To the voices out of the dark,--
- For the whisper over the wire,
- From the bombed and the battered trenches where the wounded moan
- in the mire,--
- For a sign to waken the thunder
- Which shatters the night in sunder
- With the flash of the leaping muzzles and the beat of
- battery-fire.
-
-
-
-
- THE OBSERVERS
-
-
- Ere the last light that leaps the night has hung and shone and
- died,
- While yet the breast-high fog of dawn is swathed about the
- plain,
- By hedge and track our slaves go back, the waning stars for
- guide,
- Eyes of our mouths; the mists have cleared, the guns would
- speak again!
-
- Faint on the ears that strain to hear, their orders trickle down
- "Degrees--twelve--left of zero line--corrector one three
- eight--
- Three thousand." ... Shift our trails and lift the muzzles that
- shall drown
- The rifle's idle chatter when our sendings detonate.
-
- Sending or still, these serve our will; the hidden eyes that
- mark
- From gutted farm, from laddered tree that scans the furrowed
- slope,
- From coigns of slag whose pit-ropes sag on burrowed ways and
- dark,
- In open trench where sandbags hold the steady periscope.
-
- Waking, they know the instant foe, the bullets phutting by,
- The blurring lens, the sodden map, the wires that leak or
- break!
- Sleeping, they dream of shells that scream adown a sunless sky--
- And the splinters patter round them in their dug-outs as they
- wake.
-
- Not theirs, the wet glad bayonet, the red and racing hour,
- The rush that clears the bombing-post with knife and
- hand-grenade;
- Not theirs the zest when, steel to breast, the last survivors
- cower,--
- Yet can ye hold the ground ye won, save these be there to aid?
-
- These, that observe the shell's far swerve, these of the quiet
- voice,
- That bids "go on," repeats the range, corrects for fuse or
- line...
- Though dour the task their masters ask, what room for thought or
- choice?
- This is ours by right of service, heedless gift of youthful
- eyne!
-
- Careless they give while yet they live; the dead we tasked too
- sore
- Bear witness we were naught begrudged of riches or of youth;
- Careless they gave; across their grave our calling salvoes roar,
- And those we maimed come back to us in proof our dead speak
- truth!
-
-
-
-
- AMMUNITION COLUMN
-
-
- _I am only a cog in a giant machine, a link of an endless
- chain:--_
- _And the rounds are drawn, and the rounds are fired,_
- _and the empties return again;_
- _'Railroad, lorry, and limber; battery, column, and park;_
- _'To the shelf where the set fuse waits the breech, from_
- _the quay where the shells embark._
- We have watered and fed, and eaten our beef; the
- long dull day drags by,
- As I sit here watching our "Archibalds" _strafing_ an empty sky;
- Puff and flash on the far-off blue round the speck
- one guesses the plane--
- Smoke and spark of the gun-machine that is fed by the endless
- chain.
-
- I am only a cog in a giant machine, a little link in the chain,
- Waiting a word from the wagon-lines that the guns are hungry
- again:--
- _Column-wagon to battery-wagon, and battery-wagon to gun;_
- _To the loader kneeling 'twixt trail and wheel from the_
- _shops where the steam-lathes run._
- There's a lone mule braying against the line where
- the mud cakes fetlock-deep!
- There's a lone soul humming a hint of a song in
- the barn where the drivers sleep;
- And I hear the pash of the orderly's horse as he
- canters him down the lane--
- Another cog in the gun-machine, a link in the selfsame chain.
-
- I am only a cog in a giant machine, but a vital link in the
- chain;
- And the Captain has sent from the wagon-line to
- fill his wagons again;--
- _From wagon-limber to gunpit dump; from loader's forearm at
- breech_
- _To the working party that melts away when the shrapnel_
- _bullets screech.--_
- So the restless section pulls out once more in column
- of route from the right,
- At the tail of a blood-red afternoon; so the flux of another
- night
- Bears back the wagons we fill at dawn to the sleeping column
- again...
- Cog on cog in the gun-machine, link on link in the chain!
-
-
-
-
- THE VOICE OF THE GUNS
-
-
- We are the guns, and your masters! Saw ye our flashes?
- Heard ye the scream of our shells in the night, and the
- shuddering crashes?
- Saw ye our work by the roadside, the gray wounded lying,
- Moaning to God that he made them--the maimed and the dying?
- Husbands or sons,
- Fathers or lovers, we break them! We are the guns!
-
- We are the guns and ye serve us! Dare ye grow weary,
- Steadfast at nighttime, at noontime; or waking, when dawn
- winds blow dreary
- Over the fields and the flats and the reeds of the barrier
- water,
- To wait on the hour of our choosing, the minute decided for
- slaughter?
- Swift the clock runs;
- Yes, to the ultimate second. Stand to your guns!
-
- We are the guns and we need you! Here in the timbered
- Pits that are screened by the crest and the copse
- where at dusk ye unlimbered,
- Pits that one found us--and, finding, gave life (did
- he flinch from the giving?);
- Laboured by moonlight when wraith of the dead
- brooded yet o'er the living,
- Ere with the sun's
- Rising the sorrowful spirit abandoned its guns.
-
- Who but the guns shall avenge him? Strip us for action!
- Load us and lay to the centremost hair of the dial-sight's
- refraction.
- Set your quick hands to our levers to compass the sped soul's
- assoiling;
- Brace your taut limbs to the shock when the thrust
- of the barrel recoiling
- Deafens and stuns!
- Vengeance is ours for our servants. Trust ye the guns!
-
- Least of our bond-slaves or greatest, grudge ye the burden?
- Hard is this service of ours which has only our service for
- guerdon:
- Grow the limbs lax, and unsteady the hands, which
- aforetime we trusted;
- Flawed, the clear crystal of sight; and the clean
- steel of hardihood rusted?
- _Dominant ones,_
- _Are we not tried serfs and proven--true to our guns?_
-
- _Ye are the guns! Are we worthy? Shall not these speak for
- us,_
- _Out of the woods where the torn trees are slashed with_
- _the vain bolts that seek for us,_
- _Thunder of batteries firing in unison, swish of shell
- flighting,_
- _Hissing that rushes to silence and breaks to the thud of
- alighting?_
- _Death that outruns_
- _Horseman and foot? Are we justified? Answer, O guns!_
-
- Yea! by your works are ye justified,--toil unrelieved;
- Manifold labours, cooerdinate each to the sending achieved;
- Discipline, not of the feet but the soul, unremitting,
- unfeigned;
- Tortures unholy by flame and by maiming, known, faced, and
- disdained;
- Courage that shuns
- Only foolhardiness;--even by these are ye worthy your guns!
-
- Wherefore--and unto ye only--power has been given;
- Yea! beyond man, over men, over desolate cities and riven;
- Yea! beyond space, over earth and the seas and the
- sky's high dominions;
- Yea! beyond time, over Hell and the fiends and
- the Death-Angel's pinions!
- Vigilant ones,
- Loose them, and shatter, and spare not. We are the guns!
-
-
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS U . S . A
-
-
-
-
- ----
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-
-
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-
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- THE DIPLOMACY OF THE WAR OF 1914: The Beginnings of the War
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-
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-written without one superfluous word to mar the directness of their
-appeal."--_New York Times_. $1.50 net.
-
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- A SONG OF THE GUNS
- GILBERT FRANKAU
-
-Vivid, powerful verse written to the roar of guns on the western front,
-by a son of Frank Danby, the novelist.
-
-
- Biography
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- KITCHENER, ORGANIZER OF VICTORY
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-IRRADIATIONS. SAND AND SPRAY. JOHN GOULD FLETCHER.
-SOME IMAGIST POETS.
-JAPANESE LYRICS. Translated by LAFCADIO HEARN.
-AFTERNOONS OF APRIL. GRACE HAZARD CONKLING.
-THE CLOISTER: A VERSE DRAMA. EMILE VERHAEREN.
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-ROADS. GRACE FALLOW NORTON.
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-SOME IMAGIST POETS, 1916.
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