W. E. S. Owen: Sambre-Oise Canal, November 4, 1918
Afterward—little spring become prattling rill
grown rushing stream through the Shropshire meadows,
flower-dappled, by damp shade trees
and fragrant fields littered with picnic laughter,
brotherly sniping, early loves, later loving, faith
won, and lost, then won again, and then lost again—
until it stepped into the garish sun
above an annihilated plain,
and the cool water filled with the casings
of spent shells and the crimson tunics
of lost boys and the stench of war,
the purer air rent with shouting
and the drunken symphony of the guns—
after the warm and witty words flowing
from a young man scratching over his knapsack
by candlelight or gaslight
or a glow of Vereys and flares—
after the warm life and the flowing life and the life-like seas of words
opening on that other life that always happens elsewhere—
the single bullet riving the early morning air
on the bank of the canal where all of that stream was flowing—
the stop of it all, in the mud, like a hammer.
A stunned silence in the throbbing of the guns.
An unbelief in a no choice but to believe.
So it—now man, young or old, no longer—falls—
like Nineveh, Ur, and rich Babylon—
back into the darkness,
a face fading into the waters of an infinite silence:
it was.