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  • Glory
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Glory

Violet Jacob

I canna’ see ye, lad, I canna’ see ye,
For a’ yon glory that’s aboot yer heid,
Yon licht that haps ye, an’ the hosts that’s wi’ ye,
Aye, but ye live, an’ it’s mysel’ that’s deid!

They gae’d frae mill and mart; frae wind-blawn places,
And grey toon-closes; i’ the empty street
Nae mair the bairns ken their steps, their faces,
Nor stand to listen to the trampin’ feet.

Beside the brae, and soughin’ through the rashes,
Yer voice comes back to me at ilka turn,
Amang the whins, an’ whaur the water washes
The arn-tree wi’ its feet amang the burn.

Whiles ye come back to me when day is fleein’,
And a’ the road oot-by is dim wi’ nicht,
But weary een like mine is no for seein’,
An’, gin they saw, they wad be blind wi’ licht.

Deith canna’ kill. The mools o’ France lie o’er ye,
An yet ye live, O sodger o’ the Lord!
For Him that focht wi’ deith an’ dule afore ye,
He gie’d the life – ‘twas Him that gie’d the sword.

But gin ye see my face or gin ye hear me,
I daurna’ ask, I maunna’ seek to ken,
Though I should dee, wi’ sic a glory near me,
By nicht or day, come ben, my bairn, come ben!


Violet Jacob

from More Songs of Angus, and others (London: Country Life, 1918)

Tags:

bereavement pride remembrance Scots Scots World War I
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Violet Jacob1863 - 1946

Violet Jacob, known for her novels of Scottish history and her poetry written in the rich dialect of Angus, was born into an aristocratic family, and lived her adult life as an officer’s wife in England and abroad.
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