Page:A treasury of war poetry, British and American poems of the world war, 1914-1919.djvu/295

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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! Gilbert Frankau

E 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 grey 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!