News3 mins ago
War Poet
Find this poem by a little known war poet quite moving as we approach the 11th of the 11th.
The dead spake together last night,
And one to the other said:
‘Why are we dead?’
They turned them face to face about
In the place where they were laid:
‘Why are we dead?’
‘This is the sweet, sweet month o’ May,
And the grass is green o’erhead –
Why are we dead?
‘The grass grows green on the long, long tracks
That I shall never tread –
Why are we dead?
‘The lamp shines like the glow-worm spark,
From the bield where I was bred –
Why am I dead?
The other spake: ‘I’ve wife and weans,
Yet I lie in this waesome bed –
Why am I dead?
‘O, I hae wife and weans at hame,
And they clamour loud for bread –
Why am I dead?’
Quoth the first: ‘I have a sweet, sweetheart,
And this night we should hae wed –
Why am I dead?
‘And I can see another man
Will mate her in my stead,
Now I am dead.’
They turned them back to back about
In the grave where they were laid –
‘Why are we dead?’
‘I mind o’ a field, a foughten field,
Where the bluid ran routh and red
Now I am dead.’
‘I mind o’ a field, a stricken field,
And a waeful wound that bled –
Now I am dead.’
They turned them on their backs again,
As when their souls had sped,
And nothing further said
The dead spake together last night,
And each to the other said,
‘Why are we dead?’
Joseph Lee
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by maggiebee. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.