Warsaw September 1939

Robert W. Service 1874 (Preston) – 1958 (Lancieux)



I was in Warsaw when the first bomb fell;
I was in Warsaw when the Terror came -
Havoc and horror, famine, fear and flame,
Blasting from loveliness a living hell.
Barring the station towered a sentinel;
Trainward I battled, blind escape my aim.
ENGLAND! I cried. He kindled at the name:
With lion-leap he haled me. . . . All was well.

ENGLAND! they cried for aid, and cried in vain.
Vain was their valour, emptily they cried.
Bleeding, they saw their city crucified. . . .
O splendid soldier, by the last lone train,
To-day would you flame forth to fray me place?
Or; would you curse and spit into my face?

September, 1939

About this poem

Robert W. Service wrote this about the destruction of Warsaw at the beginning of WWII, and how the Poles appealed for help but received none. Today, replace Warsaw with Kyiv and the poem has new significance.

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Written on 1939

Submitted by dogojim3 on May 03, 2022

Modified on March 05, 2023

37 sec read
8

Quick analysis:

Scheme ABBAXBBA CDDCEE
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 624
Words 125
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 8, 6

Robert W. Service

Canadian, his poems are mostly about the Klondike gold rush and the far North, then later about World War I, in which he took part. more…

All Robert W. Service poems | Robert W. Service Books

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    "Warsaw September 1939" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 18 Apr. 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/125977/warsaw-september-1939>.

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