Another
poem from World War I today, this time from Ivor Gurney, who was not quite 25
when he enlisted as a private in the Gloucestershire Regiment in 1915. He’d already
had one mental breakdown (what we would now call bipolar disorder) and had been
rejected from service due to poor eyesight, but by that time the British Army
wasn’t being too picky about who enlisted.
Gurney
was wounded in the shoulder in 1917, but returned to battle and gassed a few
months later. Interestingly, at the time he rather dismissed those effects, “Being
gassed (mildly) with the new gas is no worse than catarrh or a bad cold.” But
in March 1918 he suffered another breakdown and was hospitalized, where he wrote
songs and poetry.
After
the war he was regarded as very promising, studied under Ralph Vaughn Williams
at the Royal College of Music, but had problems sustaining the effort. He
continued composing, but by 1922 his family had him declared insane. He spent his
last years in various psychiatric hospitals, dying in 1937 of tuberculosis.
Gurney
wrote and composed on a wide range of themes. His collection of poems about the
war, Severn and Somme, includes “To
his love”, which was written in 1917. His restraint in juxtaposing the violence
of the manner of death against the bucolic loveliness of his dead friend’s home
is extremely powerful.
“To
his love”
He’s
gone, and all our plans
Are
useless indeed.
We’ll
walk no more on Cotswolds
Where
the sheep feed
Quietly
and take no heed.
His
body that was so quick
Is
not as you
Knew
it, on Severn River
Under
the blue
Driving
our small boat through.
You
would not know him now…
But
still he died
Nobly,
so cover him over
With
violets of pride
Purple
from Severn side.
Cover
him, cover him soon!
And
with thick-set
Masses
of memoried flowers-
Hide
that red wet
Thing
I must somehow forget.
1 comment:
"Hide that red wet Thing I must somehow forget." OMG, I can't remember ever experiencing a line of poetry quite like that.
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