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THE STRATHCONA'S HORSE POEM 11 years 5 months ago #13247

  • QSAMIKE
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Good Morning Everyone.....

I knew this was somewhere just took me some time to find it....

It also covers the incident mentioned in the Routine Orders....

Mike

THE STRATHCONA'S HORSE

The Navy Illustrated

1900

Oh, bitter blew the western wind and chilled us to the bone
From mountain top to mountain top it made its weary moan,
While we, Strathcona's Horse, rode on, in silence and alone

The darkness closed around us like a monk's hood gathered light
it pressed upon our eyeballs, sealing up the sense of sight,
And mocked us with false flashes of a brain-begotten light.

With straining at the silence grew our hearing thunder-proof;
The moaning blast in vain flung back its echo from the kloof,
The very ground on which we rode struck dumbly to the hoof.

And no man spake, nor dared so much as loose his tethered tongue,
Which else in fevered agony from blackened lips had hung,
But now, with limpet grip compelled, to cheek and palate clung.

Strathcona's Horse had never borne the fear mark on their brow;
The oak sap was their blood - the thews, the supple maple bow;
Their swords were fashioned from the share that shod their prairie plough.

Then why those white, drawn faces? Why those breasts that strain and heave?
Those eyes that see but darkness? And those tongues that parch and cleave?
It was the tale the Zulu scout brought southward yester eve.

It was the same old tale - the farm, the false white flag, the foe;
And four good British lads that fell where murder laid them low.
And still our eyes strain eastward for the coming of the day.

A dark ravine, whose beelting sides o'erhang the path we tread-
A faint grey line, a spot of light, with shimmering haze o'er-spread-
A wreath of smoke - the farm, the farm, six hundred yards ahead.

But see - the Zulu lied. God bless that faithless, perjured black!
Those British lads died not, but live. On yonder chimney stack
Behold wrapped in the morning mist, our flag, the Union Jack!

Strathcona's Horse rode forward with a swift Canadian swing,
Their hearts with joy o'erflowing, and the teardrops glistening - Ping!
Halt! What was that? Hell's fury! 'twas the Mausers' deadly ring.

Oh, fathomless the treacherous depths within the Boer breast!
It was the foe had raised that flag above their devil's nest,
While stark and stiff four corpses lay where murder hade them rest.

Strathcona's Horse rode forward, though there fell both horse and man;
They spake no word, but every brain conceived the self-same plan:
Through every vein and nerve and thew the self-same purpose ran.

What though the Mausers raked the line, and tore great gaps between?
What through the thick clay walls stood firm, and ambushed for to screen?
There was a deed to do, whose like the world had seldom seen.

They stormed the palisades, which crashed beneath their furious stroke;
The doors with staves they battered in, the barricades they broke -
And then they bound the fiends within, with Mausers for a yoke.

Swift to the ending of the deed, yet only half begun
They daylight grows: there's bloody work still waiting to be done -
Six corpses swing athwart the face of God's own rising sun.

Bury in peace our own dear dead;« then comrades ride away;
Yet leave a mark that all may know, who hitherward shall stray,
Strathcona's Horse it was that paid a visit here to-today.

"Twas thus Strathcona's Horse left Vengeance sitting by here shrine,
Where six accused corpses broke the grey horizon line;
Their flesh to feed the vultures, and their bones to be a sign.

AUTHOR UNKNOWN
Life Member
Past-President Calgary
Military Historical Society
O.M.R.S. 1591

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THE STRATHCONA'S HORSE POEM 11 years 5 months ago #13248

  • JustinLDavies
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Mike,

Many thanks.

Somewhere I have an extract of an unpublished letter from the Provost Marshal of the SAFF (Major R.M. Poore D.S.O.) to his wife in which he says that the Strathcona's Horse story is a true one and makes some comment on the incident.

I'll try and find it for you. He also dealt with the BVC...

Best,

Justin

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THE STRATHCONA'S HORSE POEM 11 years 5 months ago #13269

  • Brett Hendey
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Elsewhere on this forum, under a thread on Sergeant Tom Vinnicombe, Natal Guides, I wrote about the summary execution of Burghers wearing parts of British uniforms. The particular instance concerned a young English-speaking Burgher from Bethal in the Transvaal.

At a recent meeting of the Johannesburg Branch of the South African Military History Society, this incident was mentioned in a lecture by Dr Arnold van Dyk on "The Diary of Lt-Colonel Harry Scobell of the Scots Greys". In an account of the lecture it was recorded that while Scobell was operating against the Boers in the Cape Colony, "He then went after General Smuts and in the course of this chase captured a young Boer named Baxter dressed in British khaki and had him summarily executed. The same thing happened a few months later with a captive named Piet Bester and these two executions later became a form of controversy and blighted his later career."

The account of the Baxter execution in Vinnicombe's biography concludes as follows:
"Very shortly before [the Baxter incident] two other members of Smut's Commando in the uniform of a British cavalry regiment had shot a British officer. John Baxter was tried, found guilty and sentenced to be shot on the same day. He was allowed to write three letters. He refused to have anything to eat or drink, asking to be left alone to smoke a pipe and say his prayers, but on the request of the British officer (Colonel Scobel [sic] of the Scots Greys) 'joined him in a drink of whiskey' before being marched away for execution."

In the circumstances, Scobell seems to have behaved well, so I wonder why this event "blighted his later career"?

Brett

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THE STRATHCONA'S HORSE POEM 11 years 5 months ago #13270

  • Frank Kelley
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Hello Brett,
I think Baxter was actually quite lucky to receive a trial, there were many who would not share his good fortune!
Regards Frank

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