The Poetry Corner

Killed

By Thomas William Hodgson Crosland

Lieutenant Keen was "great," and yet He would look over the parapet; And something smacked him in the head, And he lay down as dead as dead. He sluttered down, all proud and grim, And we set to and buried him; All night he lay and took his rest With lumps of Flanders on his breast. All day he lay in Flanders ground And rested, rested, good and sound; But when the dog-star glittered clear He calls, "By Jove, it's dark down here!" "Sergeant, ain't I for rounds?" sings he, "And where's the bally Company?" And he was answered, with respect, "Here, sir -- all present and correct!" And -- sure as I'm a man -- at night He comes along the trench, as white And cheerful as the blessd saints, To see if there was "no complaints." They cannot quieten that boy's ghost, He'll have no truck with no "Last Post," They mark him "Killed," but you may swear He's with us, be it foul or fair. He goes before us like young fire, A soldier of his soul's desire; Through the hell-reek that smothers us, He fathers us and mothers us. When we have pushed the German swine Across the pretty river Rhine, Maybe he'll bide where he was spent And lie down happy and content.