For them
For them
18 min read
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About This Book
"Poems and anecdotes of the war.
The poems were written at different periods during and after the war. They were direct impressions at the moment, many of them - anecdotes and reminiscences - set down to relieve strain, and with no thought of publication.
These are now offered as a token, to those who have suffered and endured, and to those who so long after are still suffering and enduring. To all of whom no token should be spared of love and remembrance. " The Author
When I first read the poems, I realised that no man could have written them. They speak of the unspeakable events of the war from a female perspective, but also of one who had witnessed them, a nurse, perhaps.
Then I noticed the inscription on the flyleaf and discovered that this Harry Brander was in fact Eva Muddocci, a well-known British violinist also known as Evangelina Hope Muddock.
Some of the poems are harrowing reading, for example *The Ambulance goes by* which tells of a Red Cross Sister overwhelmed by the number of wounded. Forbidden to use morphine which was needed in the hospitals, and unable to find space in the overloaded ambulance, she had a revolver which "she used at the request of the abandoned who clutched at her dress as she passed or cried out to her, pleading to be put out of their agony." Eventually she ran out of cartridges. "In all the horror her greatest memory was that of the unselfish heroism of some of the abandoned men - under circumstances of such test as nothing human could surpass."
The poems were written at different periods during and after the war. They were direct impressions at the moment, many of them - anecdotes and reminiscences - set down to relieve strain, and with no thought of publication.
These are now offered as a token, to those who have suffered and endured, and to those who so long after are still suffering and enduring. To all of whom no token should be spared of love and remembrance. " The Author
When I first read the poems, I realised that no man could have written them. They speak of the unspeakable events of the war from a female perspective, but also of one who had witnessed them, a nurse, perhaps.
Then I noticed the inscription on the flyleaf and discovered that this Harry Brander was in fact Eva Muddocci, a well-known British violinist also known as Evangelina Hope Muddock.
Some of the poems are harrowing reading, for example *The Ambulance goes by* which tells of a Red Cross Sister overwhelmed by the number of wounded. Forbidden to use morphine which was needed in the hospitals, and unable to find space in the overloaded ambulance, she had a revolver which "she used at the request of the abandoned who clutched at her dress as she passed or cried out to her, pleading to be put out of their agony." Eventually she ran out of cartridges. "In all the horror her greatest memory was that of the unselfish heroism of some of the abandoned men - under circumstances of such test as nothing human could surpass."
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