I’ve tinkered at my bits of rhymes
In weary, woeful, waiting times;
In doleful hours of battle-din,
Ere yet they brought the wounded in;
Through vigils of the fateful night,
In lousy barns by candle-light;
In dug-outs, sagging and aflood,
On stretchers stiff and bleared with blood;
By ragged grove, by ruined road,
By hearths accurst where Love abode;
By broken altars, blackened shrines
I’ve tinkered at my bits of rhymes.
-excerpt from the Foreward to Robert Service's "Rhymes of a Red Cross Man"
Robert Service was living as a struggling poet in Montmartre neighborhood of Paris when WWI broke out. He watched as his fellow artists went off to their home nations and joined the respective military services, but could not find it in himself to join the cause to fight. Instead, he joined the Red Cross as a stretcher bearer and ambulance driver. He was in the thick of it for quite some time and was wounded himself. Wayne/Stickbender mentions some of the great works in this collection. Some of the stuff points out the sheer stupid barbarity of war, other pieces like "Jean Desprez" reveal the epic struggle of good versus evil. Service never, ever considered himself a poet. But rather just a "rhymster", a "writer of middling verse". But it speaks to regular people like us, not the ejicated ivory tower types. His introduction to "Rhymes of a Red Cross Man" continues:
:...So here’s my sheaf of war-won verse,
And some is bad, and some is worse.
And if at times I curse a bit,
You needn’t read that part of it;
For through it all like horror runs
The red resentment of the guns.
And you yourself would mutter when
You took the things that once were men,
And sped them through that zone of hate
To where the dripping surgeons wait;
And wonder too if in God’s sight
War ever, ever can be right.
Yet may it not be, crime and war
But effort misdirected are?
And if there’s good in war and crime,
There may be in my bits of rhyme,
My songs from out the slaughter mill:
So take or leave them as you will."