Anzac Cove

Anzac Cove

A Poem by David Lewis Paget

They spent the night on the Prince of Wales

Not one of them slept a wink,

Packed like herrings against the rails

It was hard to even think,

They scribbled their final letters to

The folk that they loved back home,

Then briefly thought of the western plains

And the lives that they once had known.

 

They’d never fought in a foreign war

They’d never been far from home,

But were part of the greatest Empire

That the world had seen, since Rome,

They would stay to fight in the fields of France

In the shattering burst of shells,

But first were sent from the Pyramids

To the straits of the Dardanelles.

 

There were miners from Coolgardie

There were farmhand boys galore,

Ready to fix their bayonets

As they closed on the Turkish shore,

The boats were lowered at two o’clock

With the Moon behind a cloud,

And then the pinnaces towed them in,

For some it would mean a shroud.

 

It was said that they’d land at Gaba Tepe

But they couldn’t afford a flare,

The current drifted them further north

So they landed at Sari Bair.

A line of Turks took to their heels

When they saw their bayonets,

But they surged across the beach to find

They were blocked by a line of cliffs.

 

They cursed and they clawed their way up these,

They were stranded in ravines,

The Turks were firing down on them

From the heights that they hadn’t seen,

The second wave got the worst of it

As the boats came in a glut,

The beach was strafed with an enfilade

And they died, still standing up.

 

They saw their mates from the Groper state

Drop dead without a cry,

Face down, out in the harbour with

Their harness, floating wide,

A Digger would curse that he’d lost his hat

Would sit and peer about,

Then blood would gush from his forehead

And you’d know that his lights were out.

 

You couldn’t be still for a moment there

You had to move on ahead,

The snipers up on the heights would

Take a sight, and you were dead.

They pushed on up and they took some out

And the view was better there,

They knew they needed to take the heights

Of the hill called Chunuk Bair.

 

The maps that they had were out of sync

And the scrub was six feet high,

They’d stumble blindly over a ridge

To drop where the bullets fly,

The reinforcements, down on the beach

Were still pinned down to a man,

With half the company out of reach

Or filling their mouths with sand.

 

They never made it to Chunuk Bair

The party was forced back down,

Back on the beach the sea was red

In a fifty yard surround,

The ships were shelling, and overhead

There was shrapnel, flying free,

Most of the officers were dead

And the rest were out at sea.

 

There’s blood on the sides of Chunuk Bair

There’s blood in the hills and plains,

And the bleached white bones of Australian sons

Are revealed in the winter rains,

A nation blooded a world away

From its acres of golden wheat,

Where its people stop on an April day

And they bow their heads in the street.

 

Their losses, they were horrendous

And the Turks lost even more,

Eight thousand diggers had lost their lives

And you may well ask, what for?

They left the beach in December

In the night, just as they came,

And Rosemary grows on the Turkish shore

That engraved the Anzac name!

 

David Lewis Paget

© 2013 David Lewis Paget


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the horror of war. so many 'snapshot' moments in this piece:
There’s blood on the sides of Chunuk Bair
There’s blood in the hills and plains,
And the bleached white bones of Australian sons
Are revealed in the winter rains,
I found that image especially strong.
A compelling poem.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Goodness.. you're simply amazing. I can't find the words to tell you how marveled I am after reading this poem.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Talent in every word and every phrase, your topic is powerful and you ignite powerful emotions

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

this is realllllllly wonderful...!!
very well done..!!!
keep writing and rocking..!!

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

i love your writes. i have, suffice to say, been reminded of the movie, Gallipoli and the other one The Lighthoresemen.....it is hard not to go there....no braver souls were there than the Aussie soldiers sacrificed by English generals to save their own...really kinda pisses me off.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

A wonderful tale of the days of the British Empire.Though all of them are gone now It is nice to see that the descendants of the men who fought there and died still remember them fondly. The Aussies were ferocious to say the least. Cut down in the flower of youth. As always stunning like a van gogh of poetry.

Posted 10 Years Ago


April 25, 1915, the Anzac force was landed at Gallipoli.
ANZAC - Australia & New Zealand Army Corps.

Posted 10 Years Ago


Wow, David. This is just stunning work! I've heard the American and British tales of D-Day, but this is the first time I've heard of the Australian account. You told it with such description, that I was right there.. watching it all unfold around me. Beautiful!

Posted 10 Years Ago



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1070 Views
28 Reviews
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Shelved in 1 Library
Added on May 21, 2013
Last Updated on May 21, 2013
Tags: Dardanelles, Turks, Australians, Diggers

Author

David Lewis Paget
David Lewis Paget

Moonta, South Australia, Australia



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