For the fainthearted . . .

Ledwidge and Evans

Visiting Ypres last month, the list of places to be visited included Artillery Wood cemetery.

It is a location that blends into the agricultural land around. Down a side road, it is a place of tranquility. There is nothing to disturb the wandering among the lines of white headstones.

Ledwidge and Evans lie near each other: Francis Ledwidge, a labourer from Co Meath, and Humprey Ellis Evans “Hedd Wyn” (Blessed Peace), a farmer’s son from Merionydd.

On 31st July 1917, Ledwidge was one of a group of men detailed to repair a road and was killed by a shell that landed among them as they stopped to drink tea.

Father Devas, a chaplain who knew Ledwidge, arrived soon after the shelling, and wrote, ‘Ledwidge killed, blown to bits’.

Ellis Evans was mortally wounded by a bullet that hit him in the stomach as his battalion advanced across No Man’s Land.

The men were both established poets, Ledwidge’s work had been published, Hedd Wyn was to win the bard’s chair at the 1917 Eisteddfodd, an award he would never be able to collect because he lay beneath the mud of Flanders.

When the Eisteddfod had taken place on 6th September 1917, the Western Mail reported,

“The name of the successful competitor was called and no response was forthcoming – the Archdruid, after consulting the records, announced that the successful competitor was Ellis Evans, Trawsfynydd, who had sent his composition in July last. Since then he had been sent with his draft to France and there, like so many others, had laid down his life for his country.”

Both men had to cope with contradictions.

Ellis Evans came from a Welsh chapel background, evangelical Christians with a strong pacifist background. To have joined the army was contrary to his tradition and his beliefs and, as a shepherd, he might have claimed the status of a reserved occupation.

Ledwidge had been a trade union organizer and was an Irish nationalist. To fight a war on behalf of the Empire was contrary to both traditions.

Perhaps it was the contradictions in his background that gave Ledwidge an understanding of the need for a history that included everyone.

After the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin and the ensuing executions, which were performed by the British army in which Ledwidge was serving, he wrote a Lament for Thomas McDonagh, himself a poet. The opening lines of the poem appear on the memorial tablet that stands below the Tricolour that flies close to Artillery Wood cemetery:

He shall not hear the bittern cry
In the wild sky, where he is lain,
Nor voices of the sweeter birds,
Above the wailing of the rain.

There seems an irony that lines written to commemorate an Easter rebel executed in 1916 were used to commemorate the soldier in the British army who wrote them, but perhaps Ledwidge would have smiled at the thought that his commemoration is one that embodies the contradictions and complexities of Irish history.

Hedd Wyn’s tradition seems not to have fared so well. Christian pacifism seems almost to have disappeared and the great chapel tradition that nurtured it has disappeared in many places. Perhaps, as Hedd Wyn suggested in his poem War, God has gone.

Why must I live in this grim age,
When, to a far horizon, God
Has ebbed away, and man, with rage,
Now wields the sceptre and the rod?
Man raised his sword, once God had gone,
To slay his brother, and the roar
Of battlefields now casts upon
Our homes the shadow of the war.
The harps to which we sang are hung,
On willow boughs, and their refrain
Drowned by the anguish of the young
Whose blood is mingled with the rain.

Artillery Wood cemetery seems to mark crossroads in political and theological history.

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