C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Habberton Lulham
Poems of the Great War: His Only Way
I
And talked long with a shepherd lad;
I found him pondering by his sheep,
Motionless, staring-eyed, and sad.
Long polished by his father’s hand—
He told, with slow-tongued eagerness,
This love-tale of his Sussex land:
But he was always down at plough,
And in and out the village, like,
And—well, he ’listed, anyhow;
And our girl, though she liked us two
Equal it seemed, she took his ring—
As, sure, she’d right enough to do.
Somewheres in Flanders, so ’tis said;
And I can’t go to her, I feels,
Because of Dick there lying dead.
And mopes and mourns that bitterly,
But I can’t go and say a word,
Because he died for her, you see.
I’ve pieced it all out clear and plain—
As I must go like Dick has gone,
Afore I looks at her again.
And listen, maybe, for my call;
And master, he’ll be proper mad,
With lambing coming on, and all.
He went, and ’tis the only thing;
Else I shall grow to hate the hill
And get ashamed o’ shepherding.
Aside the copse, where I could see
(It seems a score o’ years agone)
Our girl stand waving up to me.
(The same as you done, Dick, old lad!)
Then, if I gets back, I can go
Fair, like, and face her proud and glad.”