Beaumont-Hamel

Item

Beaumont-Hamel

Captured, November 16th, 1916

1

DEAD men at Beaumont

In the mud and rain.

You that were so warm once,

Flesh and blood and brain,

You've made an end of dying,

Hurts and cold and crying,

And all but quiet lying

Easeful after pain.

2

Dead men at Beaumont,

Do you dream at all

When the leaves of summer

Ripen to their fall?

Will you walk the heather,

Feel the Northern weather,

Wind and sun together,

Hear the grouse-cock call?

3

Maybe in the night-time

A shepherd boy will see

Dead men, and ghastly,

Kilted to the knee,

Fresh from new blood-shedding,

With airy footsteps treading,

Hill and field and steading,

Where they used to be.

4

Nay, not so I see you,

Dead friends of mine;

But like a dying pibroch

From the battle-line

I hear your laughter ringing,

And the sweet songs you're singing,

And the keen words winging

Across the smoke and wine.

5

So we still shall see you,

Be it peace or war,

Still in all adventures

You shall go before.

And our children dreaming,

Shall see your bayonets gleaming,

Scotland's warriors streaming

Forward evermore.

Title
Beaumont-Hamel
Identifier
greatwar_mackintosh004
Media
<html xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><body><h1 align="left" class="head">Beaumont-Hamel</h1><h1 align="center" class="head"><em>Captured, November 16th,</em> 1916</h1><div class="stanza"><p class="subhead">1</p><p class="line">DEAD men at Beaumont</p><p class="line">In the mud and rain.</p><p class="line">You that were so warm once,</p><p class="line">Flesh and blood and brain,</p><p class="line">You've made an end of dying,</p><p class="line">Hurts and cold and crying,</p><p class="line">And all but quiet lying</p><p class="line">Easeful after pain.</p></div><div class="stanza"><p class="subhead">2</p><p class="line">Dead men at Beaumont,</p><p class="line">Do you dream at all</p><p class="line">When the leaves of summer</p><p class="line">Ripen to their fall?</p><p class="line">Will you walk the heather,</p><p class="line">Feel the Northern weather,</p><p class="line">Wind and sun together,</p><p class="line">Hear the grouse-cock call?</p></div><div class="stanza"><p class="subhead">3</p><p class="line">Maybe in the night-time</p><p class="line">A shepherd boy will see</p><p class="line">Dead men, and ghastly,</p><p class="line">Kilted to the knee,</p><p class="line">Fresh from new blood-shedding,</p><p class="line">With airy footsteps treading,</p><p class="line">Hill and field and steading,</p><p class="line">Where they used to be.</p></div><div class="stanza"><p class="subhead">4</p><p class="line">Nay, not so I see you,</p><p class="line">Dead friends of mine;</p><p class="line">But like a dying pibroch</p><p class="line">From the battle-line</p><p class="line">I hear your laughter ringing,</p><p class="line">And the sweet songs you're singing,</p><p class="line">And the keen words winging</p><p class="line">Across the smoke and wine.</p></div><div class="stanza"><p class="subhead">5</p><p class="line">So we still shall see you,</p><p class="line">Be it peace or war,</p><p class="line">Still in all adventures</p><p class="line">You shall go before.</p><p class="line">And our children dreaming,</p><p class="line">Shall see your bayonets gleaming,</p><p class="line">Scotland's warriors streaming</p><p class="line">Forward evermore.</p></div></body></html>