Rhymes of a Red Cross Man

Robert Service was born in Lancashire, England, but at age 21 moved to Canada and eventually ended up in the Yukon during the gold rush. His poems "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" and "The Cremation of Sam McGee" helped secure his reputation as the “Bard of the Yukon.” During World War I, Service was an ambulance driver and stretcher bearer for the Red Cross. This volume of poems springs from these experiences during the war.


By : Robert W. Service (1874 - 1958)

01 - Dedication and Foreword



02 - The Fool



03 - The Volunteer



04 - The Convalescent



05 - The Man from Athabaska



06 - The Red Retreat



07 - The Haggis of Private McPhee



08 - The Lark



09 - The Odyssey of 'Erbert 'Iggins



10 - A Song of Winter Weather



11 - Tipperary Days



12 - Fleurette



13 - Funk



14 - Our Hero



15 - My Mate



16 - Milking Time



17 - Young Fellow My Lad



18 - A Song of the Sandbags



19 - On the Wire



20 - Bill's Grave



21 - Jean Desprez



22 - Going Home



23 - Cocotte



24 - My Bay'nit



25 - Carry On!



26 - Over the Parapet



27 - The Ballad of Soulful Sam



28 - Only a Boche



29 - Pilgrims



30 - My Prisoner



31 - Tri-colour



32 - A Pot of Tea



33 - The Revelation



34 - Grand-père



35 - Son



36 - The Black Dudeen



37 - The Little Piou-piou



38 - Bill the Bomber



39 - The Whistle of Sandy McGraw



40 - The Stretcher-Bearer



41 - Wounded



42 - Faith



43 - The Coward



44 - Missis Moriarty's Boy



45 - My Foe



46 - My Job



47 - The Song of the Pacifist



48 - The Twins



49 - The Song of the Soldier-born



50 - Afternoon Tea



51 - The Mourners



52 - L'Envoi



53 - About the Author


I've tinkered at my bits of rhymes
     In weary, woeful, waiting times;
     In doleful hours of battle-din,
     Ere yet they brought the wounded in;
     Through vigils of the fateful night,
     In lousy barns by candle-light;
     In dug-outs, sagging and aflood,
     On stretchers stiff and bleared with blood;
     By ragged grove, by ruined road,
     By hearths accurst where Love abode;
     By broken altars, blackened shrines
     I've tinkered at my bits of rhymes.

     I've solaced me with scraps of song
     The desolated ways along:
     Through sickly fields all shrapnel-sown,
     And meadows reaped by death alone;
     By blazing cross and splintered spire,
     By headless Virgin in the mire;
     By gardens gashed amid their bloom,
     By gutted grave, by shattered tomb;
     Beside the dying and the dead,
     Where rocket green and rocket red,
     In trembling pools of poising light,
     With flowers of flame festoon the night.
     Ah me! by what dark ways of wrong
     I've cheered my heart with scraps of song.

     So here's my sheaf of war-won verse,
     And some is bad, and some is worse.
     And if at times I curse a bit,
     You needn't read that part of it;
     For through it all like horror runs
     The red resentment of the guns.
     And you yourself would mutter when
     You took the things that once were men,
     And sped them through that zone of hate
     To where the dripping surgeons wait;
     And wonder too if in God's sight
     War ever, ever can be right.

     Yet may it not be, crime and war
     But effort misdirected are?
     And if there's good in war and crime,
     There may be in my bits of rhyme,
     My songs from out the slaughter mill:
     So take or leave them as you will.


The Call

 (France, August first, 1914)
     Far and near, high and clear,
     Hark to the call of War!
 Over the gorse and the golden dells,
 Ringing and swinging of clamorous bells,
 Praying and saying of wild farewells:
     War!  War!  War!

     High and low, all must go:
     Hark to the shout of War!
 Leave to the women the harvest yield;
 Gird ye, men, for the sinister field;
 A sabre instead of a scythe to wield:
     War!  Red War!

     Rich and poor, lord and boor,
     Hark to the blast of War!
 Tinker and tailor and millionaire,
 Actor in triumph and priest in prayer,
 Comrades now in the hell out there,
     Sweep to the fire of War!

     Prince and page, sot and sage,
     Hark to the roar of War!
 Poet, professor and circus clown,
 Chimney-sweeper and fop o' the town,
 Into the pot and be melted down:
     Into the pot of War!

     Women all, hear the call,
     The pitiless call of War!
 Look your last on your dearest ones,
 Brothers and husbands, fathers, sons:
 Swift they go to the ravenous guns,
     The gluttonous guns of War.

     Everywhere thrill the air
     The maniac bells of War.
 There will be little of sleeping to-night;
 There will be wailing and weeping to-night;
 Death's red sickle is reaping to-night:
     War!  War!  War!

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