"The Great Sacrifice" by James Clark |
In the valley
of the shadow of death that was the Great War, soldiers and civilians across
Europe found comfort in assuring themselves that God was on their side. Writing long after the war, British soldier-poet
Robert Graves recalled that
Christ was being evoked
alike by the Germans and the Allies for victory in a new sort of total war. This
paradox made most of us English soldiers serving in the purgatorial trenches
lose all respect for organized Pauline religion, though still feeling a
sympathetic reverence for Jesus as our fellow-sufferer. Cross-road Calvaries
emphasized this relationship.”*
As
evidence of this common connection forged between Christ and soldiers, Graves quotes
an excerpt from Wilfred Owen’s poem “At a Calvary near the Ancre”:
One ever hangs where
shelled roads part.
In this war He too lost
a limb,
But His disciples hide
apart;
And now the Soldiers
bear with Him.
In his
poem “Solomon
in All His Glory,” First World War military chaplain Geoffrey Studdert Kennedy likens the “bloody sweaty tatters” of the wounded to “the robes of Jesus
Christ,” and Paul Fussell, in The Great
War and Modern Memory, writes, “The sacrificial theme, in which each
soldier becomes a type of the crucified Christ, is at the heart of countless
Great War poems.”**
But perhaps
the best-known poem of the war that linked Christ and front-line soldiers was
written by a woman on the home front. “Christ in Flanders” was written by Lucy
Whitmell, former president of the Leeds
Astronomical Society, wife of astronomer Charles Whitmell, and sister of a war
nurse. The poem first appeared in London’s Spectator on September 11th in 1915, and it was reprinted as a leaflet, card, and gospel tract, selling
over 50,000 copies.***
Christ in Flanders
British WWI postcard |
We had forgotten You, or very nearly —
You did not seem to touch us very nearly —
Of course we thought about You now and then;
Especially in any time of trouble —
We knew that You were good in time of trouble —
But we are very ordinary men.
And there were always other things to think of —
There’s lots of things a man has got to think of —
His work, his home, his pleasure, and his wife;
And so we only thought of You on Sunday —
Sometimes, perhaps, not even on a Sunday —
Because there’s always lots to fill one’s life.
And, all the while, in street or lane or byway —
In country lane, in city street, or byway —
You walked among us, and we did not see.
Your feet were bleeding as You walked our pavements —
How did we miss Your footprints on our pavements? —
Can there be other folk as blind as we?
Now we remember; over here in Flanders —
(It isn't strange to think of You in Flanders) —
German WWI postcard |
This hideous warfare seems to make things clear.
We never thought about You much in England —
But now that we are far away from England,
We have no doubts, we know that You are here.
You helped us pass the jest along the trenches —
Where, in cold blood, we waited in the trenches —
You touched its ribaldry and made it fine.
You stood beside us in our pain and weakness —
We're glad to think You understand our weakness —
Somehow it seems to help us not to whine.
We think about You kneeling in the Garden —
Ah! God! the agony of that dread Garden —
We know You prayed for us upon the cross.
If anything could make us glad to bear it —
’Twould be the knowledge that You willed to bear it —
Pain — death — the uttermost of human loss.
Though we forgot You — You will not forget us —
We feel so sure that You will not forget us —
But stay with us until this dream is past.
And so we ask for courage, strength, and pardon —
Especially, I think, we ask for pardon —
And that You'll stand beside us to the last.
—Lucy
Whitmell
Contemporary
critics have accused the poem of sentimentality, yet “Christ
in Flanders” was deeply comforting to many. As literary scholar Amy Helen Bell
explains,
Rather than using abstract concepts of Christian
spiritual belief, like “glory,” Whitmell imagines how thoughts of Christ help
comfort the men in the trenches …. Christ becomes a comrade, a sharer in trench
life and its jests. Though wartime
suffering and death is still portrayed as the will of God, it is the will of
God humanized, prayed for by a man suffering on his own, personal cross.†
Two years after the poem was first published, the
Spectator published another poem,
presumably written by a soldier, entitled “To the Writer of ‘Christ in
Flanders:’”††
On the battlefields of Flanders men have
blessed you in their pain:
For you told us Who was with us, and your
words were not in vain.
All you said was very gentle, but we felt you
knew our ways;
And we tried to find the Footprints we had
missed in other days.
When we found Those blood-stained Footsteps,
we have followed to the End;
For we know that only Death can show the
features of our Friend.
In the Mansions of the Master, He will make
the meaning plain
Of the battlefields of Flanders, of the
Crucifix of Pain.
—E.M.V.
Lucy Whitmell did not live to see the end of
the war, but died in May of 1917 and is buried at Lawnswood Cemetery in Adel, a
suburb of Leeds. The inscription on the side of her headstone reads, “She wrote ‘Christ in
Flanders.’”
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* Robert Graves, 5 Pens in Hand, Doubleday, 1958, p. 123.
** Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory, Oxford
UP, 2000, p. 119.
*** “By the Way,” New Outlook, vol. 113, 9 Aug. 1916, p.
878. Additionally, a notice in the Spectator
appearing on 14 Sept. 1918 advertised, “Mrs. Whitmell’s poem ‘Christ in Flanders,’
which, since its first appearance in the Spectator
for September 11, 1915, has found appreciative readers
throughout the English-speaking world, has been set to music by Mr. Henry Guise
(Novelle, 2s. net).”
† Amy Helen Bell, “Nought were we spared”: British Women Poets
of the Great War, Master’s Thesis, Dalhousie University, 1996, p. 169.
†† E.M.V., “To the Writer
of ‘Christ in Flanders,’” Spectator, 13
Jan. 1917, p. 45. The poem appeared next
to another poem featured in this blog: Mary Adair Macdonald’s “Epiphany Vision.”
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