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Poem by Edmund Charles Blunden


The Festubert Shrine


A sycamore on either side
In whose lovely leafage cried
    Hushingly the little winds —
Thus was Mary’s shrine descried.


“Sixteen Hundred and Twenty-Four”
Legended above the door,
    “Pray, sweet gracious Lady, pray
For our souls,”—and nothing more.


Builded of rude gray stones and these
Scarred and marred from base to frieze
    With the shrapnel’s pounces—ah,
Fair she braved War’s gaunt disease:


Fair she pondered on the strange
Embitterments of latter change,
    Looking fair towards Festubert,
Cloven roof and tortured grange.


Work of carving too there was,
(Once had been her reredos),
    In this cool and peaceful cell
That the hoarse guns blared across.


Twisted oaken pillars graced
With oaken amaranths interlaced
    In oaken garlandry, had borne
Her holy niche—and now laid waste.


Mary, pray for us? O pray!
In thy dwelling by this way
    What poor folks have knelt to thee!
We are no less poor than they.



Edmund Charles Blunden


Edmund Charles Blunden's other poems:
  1. The Time Is Gone
  2. The Scythe
  3. Thiepval Wood
  4. Forefathers
  5. The Midnight Skaters


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