One hundred years ago the major European
powers had found themselves locked in an excruciatingly slow form of
mutually-assured destruction. Trenches gouged farmland across Belgium and
Northern France, and across Galicia in Poland and Russia. Men—soldiers—lived like
the vermin they shared their patches of filth with. Nothing was certain except
the choice between death and misery.
1915 was the year that German Zeppelins began
bombing cities in Britain. Deliberately targeting civilians—a first.
1915 was the year that the Germans used
poison gas, firing it in shells at Russian positions west of Warsaw. Later in
the year they discharged it from more than 5,000 cylinders around Ypres, in
Belgium, letting the winds carry it wherever they happened to go. Chemical warfare—a
first.
1915 was the year Turks began deporting
Armenians in forced marches, murdering thousands and permitting thousands more
to die of starvation, exposure and disease. Genocide as a policy—a first.
1915 was the year Germans embarked on their U-Boat
campaign of unrestricted attacks on merchant and passenger shipping in the
waters around the British Isles. Indiscriminate preying on civilian targets
with the new submarine technology—a first.
1915 was the year Britain imposed a total sea
blockade on Germany, interdicting all shipping from all countries. Deliberate
policy of starving a country, civilian population and all—a first.
1915 was the year Allied troops landed on the
Gallipoli Peninsula in an attempt to clear the Dardanelles Straits and open
shipping lanes to Russia. The campaign was haphazardly planned, hesitantly led
and ended a few months later when remnants of the mostly Anzac troops reboarded
transports, after never having left the beaches. Amphibious campaigns—a first.
1915 was the year that the Germans introduced the Fokker
monoplane, with a synchronized machine gun that fired through the propeller
blades, allowing the pilot to attack straight ahead. The Fokker Scourge
terrorized ground troops and other aircraft over the Western Front until the
Allies caught up with the technology about a year later. Combining machinegun
killing capacity with aerial maneuverability—a first.
1915 was the year the British deployed poison gas via
cylinders, against the Germans in the Artois. Using technology because the
enemy has it it, without considering unintended consequences (or even whether it’s
effective at its purpose)—well, no, not a first. But it just shows you what
kind of war that was.
And, as you know, the way many people processed this
conflagration was through poetry. I’ve given you several before: Akhmatova
and cummings, Yeats,
Sassoon
and, of course, Owen.
You’ll see a couple of them again this year. But today let’s look at Isaac
Rosenberg.
Rosenberg was the son of Latvian Jews who immigrated to
England before he was born. Like William
Blake, his formal education ended in his mid-teens and he became an
engraver. While working this trade, he took night classes at Birkbeck College’s
art school, and then went full-time to attend the Slade School of Fine Art.
Chronic bronchitis drove him to try South Africa, where he was when war broke
out in 1914.
He was opposed to the war from the beginning, but he saw
enlistment as a way to earn a steady income, which he needed to support his
mother. He served from October 1915 until April 1918, when he was killed on the
Somme. He was 27.
Rosenberg left a stunning body of work, and it’s hard to
choose among them. But I’ll give you “Break of Day in the Trenches”, because it
reminds me of the description of that life I once heard from an old guy who’d
served in the Gordon Highlanders.
“Break of Day in the Trenches”
The
darkness crumbles away.
It
is the same old druid Time as ever,
Only
a live thing leaps my hand,
A
queer sardonic rat,
As
I pull the parapet’s poppy
To
stick behind my ear.
Droll
rat, they would shoot you if they knew
Your
cosmopolitan sympathies.
Now
you have touched this English hand
You
will do the same to a German
Soon,
no doubt, if it be your pleasure
To
cross the sleeping green between.
It
seems you inwardly grin as you pass
Strong
eyes, fine limbs, haughty athletes,
Less
chanced than you for life,
Bonds
to the whims of murder,
Sprawled
in the bowels of the earth,
The
torn fields of France.
What
do you see in our eyes
At
the shrieking iron and flame
Hurled
through still heavens?
What
quaver—what heart aghast?
Poppies
whose roots are in man’s veins
Drop,
and are ever dropping;
But
mine in my ear is safe—
Just
a little white with the dust.
There are several elements that (in
Rilke’s metaphor) pierce my eye and plunge into my heart, but that egalitarian/politically-agnostic
rat kind of finishes me off. In the end, it doesn't care whose corpses it feeds on.
Also not a first.
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