55604: The Stretcher Bearer
My stretcher is one scarlet stain,
And as I tries to scrape it clean,
I tell you what - I'm sick of pain,
For all I've heard, for all I've seen;
Around me is the hellish night,
And as the war's red rim I trace,
I wonder if in Heaven's height
Our God don't
Written [down] by Thomas Albert Crawford (my father) who served with the 15th DLI. Tommy was injured on 1st July 1916 on the Somme. He survived the war only to lose his wife (from cancer) and his two sons in their early 30's. Tommy re-married and had two sons, Colin and Brian. Colin died at 25 years of age and six months later in 1980 Tommy passed away. I have recently puslished Tommy's memoirs entitled "Tommy" available from Woodfieldpublishing.com - all royalties go to the Commonwealth Graves Commission. Editor's Comment: Pte. 28695 Thomas Albert Crawford, 15th (Service) Bn. Durham Light Infantry (later Labour Corps, service no. 123884). The 15th Bn. was part of the 21st Division, which arrived in France in September 1915. The division attacked Fricourt on the 1st July 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme (in which action Pte. Crawford was wounded). The poem 'The Stretcher Bearer' was written by Robert William Service, a British-Canadian poet and writer. It was published in 1916 in his book 'Rhymes of a Red-Cross Man' (Toronto: William Briggs, 1916). See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_W._Service.