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Poem: ‘A Mother’s thoughts on the eve of war’ by Jo Skelt
On 25, Sep 2014 | In Uncategorized | By Nicola Gauld
On the eve of her son’s departure to fight in World War One, a Birmingham mother, Mary Elizabeth Herrick, looks out of her kitchen window up at the sky checking the weather as if reading or trying to divine what will come, taking a moment to collect her thoughts…
Commissioned for the Birmingham World War One commemoration on August 3 2014, this poem was inspired by a family I read about in a display in Ward End Library. The Herricks were a large family and would have been better off than the average family and educated. They lived in a detached house on Washwood Heath road. At this point all Mary’s children were alive but her first born son Henry (the subject of the poem) goes, tragically, dies in the war. Her younger boys later go to fight and survive. Here, I am trying to imagine how she might have felt and portray an inkling or sense of foreboding of things to come. This is written almost like a diary or imagined inner thought and with poetic license i.e. not attempting to be entirely historically accurate.
A mother’s thoughts on the eve of war
On Henry’s bed, I have just laid out
his military tunic, neatly pressed
like his first starched school uniform,
and his new peaked cap
its two brass buttons shining brilliantly,
as if already victorious.
A special rifle patch has been sown
above the breast pocket
and I cannot bring myself to look at it
or to contemplate wholly, why
they are preparing him for trench warfare,
rifle fire and grenade attacks.
You know, they checked Henry’s teeth
when he enlisted,
as if he were an animal
– how I wished they had been rotten.
But the 14th Royal Warwickshire Regiment
has cast its spell,
Henry is bedazzled by the Regimental band,
football matches and boxing contests,
dreaming no doubt of glory,
the promise of arriving on French soil
of returning to his sweetheart here
more a man: a brave soldier.
I wonder has he really contemplated
what lies between? Have I?
Have any of us?
Birmingham, the entire city
seems poised for change, expectant,
strangely more excited
than trepidatious.
It is now evening, 3 August 1914,
from my kitchen window
I can see Annie, Ada and Ernest
playing in the yard, animated silhouettes,
like the Punch and Judy puppets
we saw once at the seaside,
each of them blissfully unaware
that their eldest brother, their own Henry
is leaving tomorrow for the War.
Thank heavens my other boys
are still too young for this,
I shall guard them closely
till Henry’s home again – at Christmas so they say.
It is battle enough to keep them
all alive, safe from influenza,
the cold wet weather
descending in cold fronts
when the Autumn comes.
Sometimes I feel he is lost to me
already, endlessly thumbing his tobacco
and his mess tin absorbed in imaginary adventures,
his rifle standing by the front door
as if killing time.
And they tell me to feel proud
to wave my flag
but I see only my children’s silhouettes
inside which are mouths to feed,
another on the way, the twins crying
from the parlour,
and in the fading light, my once white washing
hanging like old party bunting
-a neglected pledge for peace,
soaking up the spitting rain
while from the east, I can just make out
dark clouds gathering…
Sergeant Henry Douglas Herrick – at 19 was a Fitter and Turner
Arthur, Cecil, Harry – all 3 served in the War and Cecil wounded and received DCM
Mary Elizabeth Herrick (ne Teal) and her family lived at 177 Washwood Heath Rd at Bennets Hill House.
Her husband was Joseph Alfred Herrick of Herrick and Co. (Sock manufacturers) and also a Birmingham Councillor. They had two further children Ivy and Norman.
Jo Skelt (Birmingham Poet Laureate 2013-2014)
All Rights Reserved. This work cannot be reproduced without permission of the owner.
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I am great great granddaughter of Mary Herrick and have some family items and Henry’s medals. I have done much family history. You say the information for the poem came from Ward End Library…..l did not know of this. Marys husband Joseph Alfred Herrick was a commander, something to do with the council, he had a card from Henry who was in the trenches it reached Birmingham the day Henry died.
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