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Poem by Edmund Charles Blunden Thiepval Wood The tired air groans as the heavies swing over, the river-hollows boom; The shell-fountains leap from the swamps, and with wildfire and fume The shoulder of the chalkdown convulses. Then the jabbering echoes stampede in the slatting wood, Ember-black the gibbet trees like bones or thorns protrude From the poisonous smoke – past all impulses. To them these silvery dews can never again be dear, Nor the blue javelin-flame of the thunderous noons strike fear. Edmund Charles Blunden Edmund Charles Blunden's other poems: 1611 Views |
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