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<br/>
<h2> Only a Boche </h2>
<p>We brought him in from between the lines: we'd better have let him lie;<br/>
For what's the use of risking one's skin for a <i>TYKE</i> that's going to die?<br/>
What's the use of tearing him loose under a gruelling fire,<br/>
When he's shot in the head, and worse than dead,<br/>
and all messed up on the wire?<br/>
<br/>
However, I say, we brought him in. <i>DIABLE!</i> The mud was bad;<br/>
The trench was crooked and greasy and high, and oh, what a time we had!<br/>
And often we slipped, and often we tripped, but never he made a moan;<br/>
And how we were wet with blood and with sweat!<br/>
but we carried him in like our own.<br/>
<br/>
Now there he lies in the dug-out dim, awaiting the ambulance,<br/>
And the doctor shrugs his shoulders at him,<br/>
and remarks, "He hasn't a chance."<br/>
And we squat and smoke at our game of bridge<br/>
on the glistening, straw-packed floor,<br/>
And above our oaths we can hear his breath deep-drawn in a kind of snore.<br/>
<br/>
For the dressing station is long and low, and the candles gutter dim,<br/>
And the mean light falls on the cold clay walls<br/>
and our faces bristly and grim;<br/>
And we flap our cards on the lousy straw, and we laugh and jibe as we play,<br/>
And you'd never know that the cursed foe was less than a mile away.<br/>
As we con our cards in the rancid gloom, oppressed by that snoring breath,<br/>
You'd never dream that our broad roof-beam was swept by the broom of death.<br/>
<br/>
Heigh-ho! My turn for the dummy hand; I rise and I stretch a bit;<br/>
The fetid air is making me yawn, and my cigarette's unlit,<br/>
So I go to the nearest candle flame, and the man we brought is there,<br/>
And his face is white in the shabby light, and I stand at his feet and stare.<br/>
Stand for a while, and quietly stare: for strange though it seems to be,<br/>
The dying Boche on the stretcher there has a queer resemblance to me.<br/>
<br/>
It gives one a kind of a turn, you know, to come on a thing like that.<br/>
It's just as if I were lying there, with a turban of blood for a hat,<br/>
Lying there in a coat grey-green instead of a coat grey-blue,<br/>
With one of my eyes all shot away, and my brain half tumbling through;<br/>
Lying there with a chest that heaves like a bellows up and down,<br/>
And a cheek as white as snow on a grave, and lips that are coffee brown.<br/>
<br/>
And confound him, too! He wears, like me, on his finger a wedding ring,<br/>
And around his neck, as around my own, by a greasy bit of string,<br/>
A locket hangs with a woman's face, and I turn it about to see:<br/>
Just as I thought . . . on the other side the faces of children three;<br/>
Clustered together cherub-like, three little laughing girls,<br/>
With the usual tiny rosebud mouths and the usual silken curls.<br/>
"Zut!" I say. "He has beaten me; for me, I have only two,"<br/>
And I push the locket beneath his shirt, feeling a little blue.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, it isn't cheerful to see a man, the marvellous work of God,<br/>
Crushed in the mutilation mill, crushed to a smeary clod;<br/>
Oh, it isn't cheerful to hear him moan; but it isn't that I mind,<br/>
It isn't the anguish that goes with him, it's the anguish he leaves behind.<br/>
For his going opens a tragic door that gives on a world of pain,<br/>
And the death he dies, those who live and love, will die again and again.<br/>
<br/>
So here I am at my cards once more, but it's kind of spoiling my play,<br/>
Thinking of those three brats of his so many a mile away.<br/>
War is war, and he's only a Boche, and we all of us take our chance;<br/>
But all the same I'll be mighty glad when I'm hearing the ambulance.<br/>
One foe the less, but all the same I'm heartily glad I'm not<br/>
The man who gave him his broken head, the sniper who fired the shot.<br/>
<br/>
No trumps you make it, I think you said? You'll pardon me if I err;<br/>
For a moment I thought of other things . . .<br/>
<i>MON DIEU! QUELLE VACHE DE GUERRE.</i><br/></p>
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