The Poetry Corner

Where Are You Sleeping To-Night, My Lad?

By William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)

Where are you sleeping to-night, My Lad, Above-ground--or below? The last we heard you were up at the front, Holding a trench and bearing the brunt;-- But--that was a week ago. Ay!--that was a week ago, Dear Lad, And a week is a long, long time, When a second's enough, in the thick of the strife, To sever the thread of the bravest life, And end it in its prime. Oh, a week is long when so little's enough To send a man below. It may be that while we named your name The bullet sped and the quick end came,-- And the rest we shall never know. But this we know, Dear Lad,--all's well With the man who has done his best. And whether he live, or whether he die, He is sacred high in our memory;-- And to God we can leave the rest. So--wherever you're sleeping to-night, Dear Lad, This one thing we do know,-- When "Last Post" sounds, and He makes His rounds, Not one of you all will be out of bounds, Above ground or below.