From Thame to Great Hampden

I lift one sore foot from the stony road

My boot is hot and heavy

I put it down and lift the other

I must keep in time with the drum beat.

The track wends through fields

Ripening grain waving in the breeze

And orchards laden with black Bucks cherries

May the war pause long enough for folk to reap and eat.

Those folk come out to watch us

Lining the dusty way

Hats off and heads lowered

They know we were beaten

They know many died

And the loss is bitter.

They come to mourn our Leader

The best commander was ours

Brave and betrayed

Now he is on this cart

Our tattered standard drapes the coffin.

I march with honour in our colours

I march with my musket reversed

The sun is beating on our bare heads

I feel the horses are weeping with us.

Now the trees shelter us

Light shimmering through gentle green

The road gets steeper

We rest to quench our thirst.

The last climb is crippling

We glimpse the little church

Black-clad mourners wait

But they cannot enter

No one now or later

Will spoil our hero’s grave.

:

:

Photo: Model of a Greencoat soldier in Thame Museum, Oxfordshire, UK.