Home » Issues & Poems » Issue Twelve » Another War Horse

Another War Horse

Patricia McCarthy

I have always been haunted by the plight of horses on the Front in World War 1. It was bad enough seeing Irish carthorses fall between their shafts uphill from their heavy loads of coal – in my childhood in Ireland. I couldn’t help but imagine the trauma of my own treasured  horse being requisitioned for war, as happened to many pets. This horror was instilled into me further when I taught GCSE students All Quiet on the Western Front. Neither the students nor I could read aloud the bit about the crying of the horses being worse than the cries of the men. I have had three horses, over the years, die in their fields. Terrible to see such a noble animal go down. The latest trauma was the death of my little soul mate, Polka Necta, whom I had for twenty-eight years, outside her stable. The first poem in the sequence I wrote after an exhilarating ride in the woods the day before the school year started. I adapted it for this sequence, but it was an authentic experience. The second poem I wrote about her and the mare I have been given who was her close friend: imagining grooming them for the last time. ‘The Requisition Yard’ contains my knowledge of horses and of old horse fairs; I saw the whole scene clearly in my head in all its detail. The last poem tries to deal with loss. 

Another War Horse

(a privately-owned horse about to be requisitioned for World War 1)

 ‘…and I whispered to the horse: trust no man in whose eye you don’t see

yourself reflected as an equal.’ Don Vincenzo Giobbe, circa 1700

 

 

i

 

The Last Ride

 

I ride you, my little other half,

as if on the Day of Judgement maybe,

where summer is rolled into late stooks

 

and winter lurks, hoary, drenching

the ground with mists at which you spook.

 

The breeze, fly-ridden, whips the ferns

into gangrenous fingers of admonition

lest a delay in shady copses should lead

 

through powdered paths to procrastination.

The better going suggests speed

 

and we canter along, extended between

breath and season, you on a long rein,

in outline only: the wood’s bay stain.

 

Who was it said we never should

play here? We leap the abyss of a sett

 

spiked by brambles that jab your sides

with spurs meant for me rather than you.

Lengthened shadows have climbed trees to hide

 

from autumns that bleed.  Nothing is new

except our mutual trust as we slide down

 

a scree to an old pond bay where hurricanes

and hail slosh in a black treacle brew.

Then gallop off, past unregistered stallions

 

and wall-eyed trotters you do not pursue

out of a life-long loyalty to me

 

despite your herd instinct. Where mists part,

we reject easy divisions of good and bad flocks

on each side and continue into the heart

 

of experience – through docks

which calm stings from the horizon

 

lassooing you. In this world

of segregations in fur, feather, fold,

we steady each weald, each wold.

 

I never need take a hold.

Then we float off, a single streak

 

through war cries of vixens, pheasant cocks

practising you for worse. With your hocks

under you, we chase off fear

 

of the call-up, jumping stooks

away from where I will have to sacrifice you.

 

 

ii

 

The Last Groom

 

Your summer coat I brushed, stroking one way

the velour of its velvet so that my image

reflected there would brand itself onto you

and I would be your amulet on The Front

 

keeping you from drowning in slurries of mud,

from cannon bones snapped by shell holes,

from ligaments left on barbed wire spools.

 

My Polka, my Darcey, Bess of my dreams,

splotched by bullets that removed your sheen.

 

My fingers I wanted as your nose plugs

in mustard gas attacks, the imprint of my face

your gas mask to prevent you trashing it

like a feed bag as you grabbed mouthfuls of air.

 

One last time I combed your well-pulled mane,

plaiting into it my own brown hair, then breathed

slow, into your neck till you exhaled long breaths –

 

My Polka, my Darcey, Bess of my dreams,

splotched by bullets that removed your sheen – .

 

in time to mine: a duet to fill your manger

when you’d be gone. Into the stable’s corner

I pushed you gently, darkening you

into a shadow that no call-up would want.

 

I could not prevent the ghosts of herds gone

whickering wild for rescue through the slats,

fistulous withers, tendons bowed,  racks

 

of ribs far too pronounced. As I picked out

your feet, oiled your hooves, I pretended

we were off to a show, beribboned, buffed.

But No. You had to be broken in – to War.

 

My Polka, my Darcey, Bess of my dreams

on livery in my heart, fit always for queens.

 

 

iii

 

The Requisition Yard

 

No prayers, no rituals for the break of bonds

between horse and man; just commands

like whips on the flanks of the horses lined up

 

for suitability by size, breed, colour. No choice

but to resign you to this mock parade-ground,

blurred by steam from the sweat and loose droppings

 

of terrified mounts, ears twitching forwards

and back, by some sixth sense seeing into

their stunted futures, tolerating pain. Just as well

 

I could not hear you whicker to me when I retreated,

as if stabbed in the back; nor watch your nostrils

flare wide at the inspection: a punch on a back,

 

pinches down a leg, flexion tests for soundness.

Better too that I could not catch your eyes weeping

from something other than flies, the flash

 

of their whites amid the buzzing as, with scissors

and knives, manes were hogged, tails docked,

uniforms disembodied in the gloom, irrespective

 

of rank. I could imagine panic spreading

like an infection through the ropes while splints

got fired, straw wisps banged, burnt rinds

 

of hooves scavenged by strays. I could not look back

and, in a slumped fraternity of private owners,

I bowed my head in premature bereavement.

 

What officer would have you, I wondered,

with racing winners in your blood, your light mouth

unspoilt by harsh hands. Would you halt four square

 

at a braced back, as I had schooled you, dance

laterally over mud as through grass, knackered, with colic

from the sand?  In the distance the clatter up a ramp

 

I tried not to hear; then carriages on a rail shunted

through an engine’s steam. I could do nothing but stare

at your hairs preserved in silent dandy brushes,

 

pull from my pocket a strand of your tail teased out

to sleep on under the tarpaulin of a merciless khaki sky.

I would have preferred you to die as I held you,

 

loved, safe in the munch of an apple, in the forehead

a bullet – rather than pray in vain to find your noble face

over the stable door. Not lost in the annals of war.

 

 

iv

 

Coming to Terms

 

Months I have not been able to look at the fields.

Your absence has stood there like a presence

 

in the most boggy corner, tethered to the rope

of my loss weathering slowly to a strand frayed

 

with the long scutch grass. Tonight there is

no moon, only snow squeaking like a mind

 

resisting amnesia, giving me its eerie light

to detect you sheltered by your favourite holly,

 

icicles serrating your mane. Your ears

are pricked, your white blaze an exclamation mark,

 

of delight, as always, at my approach. From tall clumps

ungrazed too long, I pick your hoofprints to hang

 

about my wrist. Your droppings that outlive you,

in a pile, have hardened into bullets of knackers

 

who will shoot again for expedience and not preserve

the copper radiance torn from your coat as you slump.

 

Best to let you graze in memory, myself your rubbing post,

as this expanse blots out boundaries, erases misdeeds.

 

Your long red mane sweeps the snow which blanches you

with its deeps, teaching us both to withstand extremes.

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