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A Gloucestershire Lad at Home and Abroad

Chapter 35: SERGEANT FINCH
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About This Book

This collection gathers poems composed by a soldier at the Front that alternate between affectionate dialect songs celebrating Gloucestershire landscapes, traditions and pastimes and sober battlefield reflections on comradeship, sacrifice, and homesickness. Short formal pieces—ballades, trios, sonnets—and prose poems shift between light conviviality and stark moral questioning, often anchoring wartime anxiety in images of orchards, rivers and village life. Recurring themes include longing for home, the weight of witnessing death, gratitude, defiance, and the effort to reconcile pastoral memory with the experience of combat, producing verses that balance local humor and song with solemn meditation.

SERGEANT FINCH

He’s a popular sergeant, you bet,
For he’ll rough it along with his men,
And start up a song in the wet
To set ’em all smiling again.
His stories are naughty, I’m told,
His voice has a sonorous sound;
But the envy of all who behold
Is the way that his puttees are wound.
Blue-eyed, debonair, with a hat
Cocked sideways the eighth of an inch,
He’s sparrow-like: but for all that
The name in his pay-book is Finch.