TO THE KAISER

TO THE KAISER

TO THE KAISER

(Confidentially)

I met a man—a refugee,And he was blind in both his eyes, sir.And in his pateA silver plate(’Twas rather comical to see!)Shone where the bone skull used to beBefore your shrapnel struck him, Kaiser.Shattering in the self-same blast(Blind as a tyrant in his dotage),The foolish wifeWho risked her life,As peasants will do till the last,Clinging to one small Belgian cottage.That was their home. The whining childBeside him in the railway carriageWas born there, andThe little landAround it (now untilled and wild),Was brought him by his wife on marriage.The child was whining for its mother,And interrupting half he said, sir.I’ll never see the pair again....Nor they the mother that lies dead, sir.That’s all—a foolish tale, not worthThe ear of noble lord or Kaiser.A man un-named,By shrapnel maimed,Wife slain, home levelled to the earth—That’s all. You see no point? Nor I, sir.Yet on the day you come to die, sir,When all your war dreams cease to be,Perchance will riseBefore your eyes(Piercing your hollow heart, Sir Kaiser!)The picture that I chanced to see,Riding (we’ll say) from A to B.

I met a man—a refugee,And he was blind in both his eyes, sir.And in his pateA silver plate(’Twas rather comical to see!)Shone where the bone skull used to beBefore your shrapnel struck him, Kaiser.Shattering in the self-same blast(Blind as a tyrant in his dotage),The foolish wifeWho risked her life,As peasants will do till the last,Clinging to one small Belgian cottage.That was their home. The whining childBeside him in the railway carriageWas born there, andThe little landAround it (now untilled and wild),Was brought him by his wife on marriage.The child was whining for its mother,And interrupting half he said, sir.I’ll never see the pair again....Nor they the mother that lies dead, sir.That’s all—a foolish tale, not worthThe ear of noble lord or Kaiser.A man un-named,By shrapnel maimed,Wife slain, home levelled to the earth—That’s all. You see no point? Nor I, sir.Yet on the day you come to die, sir,When all your war dreams cease to be,Perchance will riseBefore your eyes(Piercing your hollow heart, Sir Kaiser!)The picture that I chanced to see,Riding (we’ll say) from A to B.

I met a man—a refugee,And he was blind in both his eyes, sir.And in his pateA silver plate(’Twas rather comical to see!)Shone where the bone skull used to beBefore your shrapnel struck him, Kaiser.Shattering in the self-same blast(Blind as a tyrant in his dotage),The foolish wifeWho risked her life,As peasants will do till the last,Clinging to one small Belgian cottage.

I met a man—a refugee,

And he was blind in both his eyes, sir.

And in his pate

A silver plate

(’Twas rather comical to see!)

Shone where the bone skull used to be

Before your shrapnel struck him, Kaiser.

Shattering in the self-same blast

(Blind as a tyrant in his dotage),

The foolish wife

Who risked her life,

As peasants will do till the last,

Clinging to one small Belgian cottage.

That was their home. The whining childBeside him in the railway carriageWas born there, andThe little landAround it (now untilled and wild),Was brought him by his wife on marriage.The child was whining for its mother,And interrupting half he said, sir.I’ll never see the pair again....Nor they the mother that lies dead, sir.

That was their home. The whining child

Beside him in the railway carriage

Was born there, and

The little land

Around it (now untilled and wild),

Was brought him by his wife on marriage.

The child was whining for its mother,

And interrupting half he said, sir.

I’ll never see the pair again....

Nor they the mother that lies dead, sir.

That’s all—a foolish tale, not worthThe ear of noble lord or Kaiser.A man un-named,By shrapnel maimed,Wife slain, home levelled to the earth—That’s all. You see no point? Nor I, sir.Yet on the day you come to die, sir,When all your war dreams cease to be,Perchance will riseBefore your eyes(Piercing your hollow heart, Sir Kaiser!)The picture that I chanced to see,Riding (we’ll say) from A to B.

That’s all—a foolish tale, not worth

The ear of noble lord or Kaiser.

A man un-named,

By shrapnel maimed,

Wife slain, home levelled to the earth—

That’s all. You see no point? Nor I, sir.

Yet on the day you come to die, sir,

When all your war dreams cease to be,

Perchance will rise

Before your eyes

(Piercing your hollow heart, Sir Kaiser!)

The picture that I chanced to see,

Riding (we’ll say) from A to B.


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