Songs Churchill Would Love: “Willie McBride”

27 June 2009

in Literary,Reviews

gilbertsommeSir Mar­tin Gilbert’s mov­ing book, The Somme: Hero­ism and Hor­ror in the First World War, ends with verses by the Scottish-Australian song­writer Eric Bogle, which carry an ever­green mes­sage to all gen­er­a­tions, and cap­ture what Churchill thought of mod­ern war—which he tried so hard, before both World Wars, to avoid.

Sir Mar­tin writes that in research for the book, he and Lady Gilbert found the grave of Pri­vate William McBride, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, killed April 1916, two months before the Somme. Whether this was the grave of Eric Bogle’s sub­ject is imma­te­r­ial. They sat down next to it and Sir Mar­tin read aloud the soft, sad words:

Well, how do you do, Pri­vate William McBride.
Do you mind if I sit here down by your grave­side?
I’ll rest for a while in the warm sum­mer sun
I’ve been walk­ing all day, and I’m nearly done.

I see by your grave­stone, you were only nine­teen
When you joined the fallen in 1916.
And I hope you died quick, and I hope you died clean.
Or, Willie McBride, was it slow and obscene?

Did they beat the drum slowly; did they play the pipes lowly;
Did the rifles fire o’er you as they low­ered you down?
Did the bugles sound The Last Post in cho­rus:
Did the pipes play The Flow’rs of the For­est?

I have quoted the first two verses and cho­rus, but the song is Mr. Bogle’s and the com­plete lyrics may be found on his website.

What I didn’t know until now was that Willie McBride “replied”…

You might think me crazy, you might think me daft,
I could have stayed back in Erin, where there wasn’t a draft,
But my par­ents raised me to tell right from wrong,
So today I shall answer what you asked in your song.

Yes, they beat the drum slowly, they played the pipes lowly,
And the rifles fired o’er me as they low­ered me down,
The band played
The Last Post in cho­rus,
And the pipes played The Flow’rs of the Forest.

Ask the peo­ple of Bel­gium or Alsace-Lorraine,
If my life was wasted, if I died in vain.
I think they will tell you when all’s said and done,
They wel­comed this boy with his tin hat and gun.

These lyrics are the copy­right of Stephen L. Suf­fet, 1997, and may be found in full on the web­site of the Yel­low Rib­bon Foun­da­tion, sup­port­ing the men and women of the British Armed Forces.

Chateau Wood, Ypres, 1917

Chateau Wood, Ypres, 1917


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