So poor, so manifestly incomplete. And your bright Promise, withered long and sped, TO GERMANY You are blind like us. And no man claimed the Your hurt no man designed, conquest of your land. But gropers both, through fields of thought confined, We stumble and we do not understand. You only saw your future bigly planned, And we the tapering paths of our own mind, And hiss and hate. And the blind fight the blind. When it is peace, then we may view again Robert Graves Robert Graves was born in England of mixed Irish, Scottish and German stock, July 26, 1895. One of "the three rhyming musketeers" (the other two being the poets Siegfried Sassoon and Robert Nichols), he was one of the several writers who, roused by the war and giving himself to his country, refused to glorify warfare or chant new hymns of hate. Like Sassoon, Graves also reacts against the storm of fury and blood-lust (see his poem "To a Dead Boche"), but, fortified by a lighter and more whimsical spirit, where Sassoon is violent, Graves is volatile; where Sassoon is bitter Graves is almost blithe. An unconquerable gayety rises from his Fairies and Fusiliers (1917), a surprising and healing humor that is warmly individual. In Country Sentiment (1919) Graves turns to a fresh and more serious simplicity. A buoyant fancy ripples beneath the most archaic of his ballads and a quaintly original turn of mind saves them from their own echoes. IT'S A QUEER TIME It's hard to know if you're alive or dead One moment you'll be crouching at your gun The next, you choke and clutch at your right breast— You're charging madly at them yelling "Fag!" Or you'll be dozing safe in your dug-out A great roar-the trench shakes and falls about— You're struggling, gasping, struggling, then . . . hullo! Elsie comes tripping gaily down the trench, Hanky to nose-that lyddite makes a stench- The trouble is, things happen much too quick; To Alleluiah-chanting, and the chime Of golden harps . . . and . . . I'm not well today It's a queer time. NEGLECTFUL EDWARD Nancy Edward, back from the Indian Sea, Edward "A rope of pearls and a gold earring, Nancy "God be praised you are back," says she, Edward "Long as I sailed the Indian Sea I gathered all for your fancy : And a bird of the East that will not sing: What more can you want, dear girl, from me?" Nancy "God be praised you are back," said she, "Have you nothing better for Nancy?" Edward "Safe and home from the Indian Sea, And nothing to take your fancy?" Nancy "You can keep your pearls and your gold earring, And your bird of the East that will not sing, But, Ned, have you nothing more for me Than heathenish gew-gaw toys?" says she, "Have you nothing better for Nancy?" I WONDER WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO BE DROWNED? Look at my knees, That island rising from the steamy seas! They're full of wine and riches from far lands. I can make caves, By lifting up the island and huge waves And storms, and then with head and ears well under Blow bubbles with a monstrous roar like thunder, A bull-of-Bashan sound. The seas run high and the boats split asunder I wonder what it feels like to be drowned? The thin soap slips And slithers like a shark under the ships. He's biting the old sailors, I expect. I wonder what it feels like to be drowned? Louis Golding Louis Golding was born in Manchester in November, 1895 and received his early education at Manchester Grammar School. War found him in 1914 and took him to Macedonia and France, where he did considerable social and educational work in several armies. On his return to England in 1919, he published his first volume of poems, Sorrow of War, and in the same year resumed his career at Oxford. The succeeding collection, Shepherd Singing Ragtime (1921) and his remarkable novel Forward From Babylon (1921), appeared while he was still an undergraduate. Golding is richly gifted; he is a realist with a romantic, almost a rhapsodic, vision. Anger, pity, irony, find a ringing if not altogether controlled voice in his prose no less than in his rhymes. PLOUGHMAN AT THE PLOUGH He, behind the straight plough, stands Naught he cares for wars and naught Only for the winds, the sheer |