Page:A treasury of war poetry, British and American poems of the world war, 1914-1919.djvu/217

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These are the last who go because they must,

Who toiled for years at something levelled now in dust;

Men of thirty, married, settled, who had built up walls of comfort

That crumbled at a thrust.

Now they have naked steel,

And the heavy, sopping rain that the clammy skin can feel,

And the leaden weight of rifle and the pack that grinds the entrails,

Wrestling with a half-cooked meal.

And there are oaths and blows,

The mud that sticks and flows,

The bad and smoky billet, and the aching legs at morning,

And the frost that numbs the toes;

And the senseless, changeless grind,

And the pettifogging mass of orders muddling every mind,

And the dull-red smudge of mutiny half rising up and burning,

Till they choke and stagger blind.

But for them no bugle flares;

No bright flags leap, no gay horizon glares;

They are conscripts, middle-aged, rheumatic, cautious, weary,

With slowly thinning hairs;

Only for one to-night

A woman weeps and moans and tries to smite

Her head against a table, and another rocks a cradle,

And another laughs with flashing eyes, sitting bolt upright. John Gould Fletcher