Paul Graham Clark and his friend Leslie Averill |
Steaming
towards war, thinking of home. Those
were the circumstances under which 20-year-old Paul Graham Clark wrote the poem
“En Voyage.” Though born in England, Clark had made New Zealand his home, and
along with other men of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force 34th
Reinforcements, he left Wellington on the 8th February 1918
aboard the troopship Ulimaroa. As his
great nephew and poet Alan Clark writes, “For many of the young kiwi soldiers
this was supposed to be the biggest adventure of their lives.”
En
Voyage
They’ve
swung her out into the harbour now
And
she’s rounded the Heads at last,
While
the waves of the briny break over her prow
And
New Zealand’s a thing of the past.
We’ve
said good-bye to the “missis,”
And
kissed all the kiddies, too,
With
a note to all that will miss us,
And
a special one sent up to you.
We’re
a speck in the boundless ocean now,
Just
a thousand poor souls, all told;
And
feel just like—well, just like how
We
felt back in the days of old
When
they fitted us out in Bill Massey’s boots,
Dished
each one out a spoon and a fork,
Then
lined us up like a lot of coots
And
told us we couldn’t talk.
Oh,
what of the squeamish first few days,
When
we’d hardly cleared N.Z.!
The transport ship Ulimaroa leaving Wellington Port, NZ |
How
the fellows in hundreds of different ways
Went
over and hung the head.
They’d
stay there forlorn for hours on end
While
they gazed at the ship’s black side,
And
swore they were counting the rivets up—
But
somehow I think that they lied.
They
shove us at night into our six by two’s
In
a hole that should only hold ten;
But
at somebody’s order—I wish I knew whose—
It’s
branded “Two hundred men.”
The
air’s none too good of a night time,
But
when in the morning we wake,
You
could take out your knife and slice it
Then
scrape it away with a rake.
The
tuckers as good as it always was-
—
I don’t think! ” did you say?
Well,
what if it isn’t, we’ll eat it because—
Well,
if we didn’t it wouldn’t pay.
We’ve
not come out on a picnic, boys,
Nor
yet on a pleasure trip,
So
we’ll have to give up a few of our joys
When
aboard the King’s troopship.
New Zealand troops after the capture of Bapaume |
So
we’re swinging away on our journey still
And
we’ve nothing to trouble us yet,
Save
our thoughts of the land that knows no ill
And
the folks that we can’t forget.
For
a life on the ocean waves all right,
And
there’s a good time yet to come;
But
as sure as the moon shines bright to-night
There’s
no place now like home.
We’re
steaming ahead for England and France
All
willing to do our bit;
We’re
willing to live or die, just as
Chance
in her uncertain way thinks fit.
But
back of the mind of each one of us
Is
the land we are longing to see,
Where
bush fire and beach are a part of us
Way
back in our “ain countree.”
—Paul Graham Clark
Chance’s
uncertain ways intervened. Paul Graham Clark never returned to New Zealand and those
he loved; he never again saw the bush fires and beaches that meant so much to
him. Attached to the New Zealand Rifle
Brigade, he was killed at the Second Battle of Bapaume on August 26, 1918.
Paul Graham Clark, Achiet-le-Grand Cmml Cty Ext. |
No comments:
Post a Comment