“The Sodgers”, by Alexander Scott (1920–1989)

Alexander Scott landed in Normandy in 1944 with the Gordon Highlanders, & saw action in the Ardennes & crossing the Rhine. He later became Head of Scottish Literature at the University of Glasgow, was president of ASL from 1976–79, & was a founding editor of our annual anthology NEW WRITING SCOTLAND

Today, 6 June, is the anniversary of D-Day

#Scottish #literature #DDay #poem #poetry #20thcentury #warpoem #warpoetry #WW2 #Scots #Scotslanguage

Painted Poppies and Poesy

Poppies, like many flowers and herbs, are beneficial to the world of medicine, but poppies appeal to me because they are survivors and symbolise life, hope, and flexibility. The immense devastation on the battlefields in the northern region of Belgium in the 1st World War left 55,500 British soldiers, as well as tens of thousands of German, French, and Belgian troops, unaccounted for - their remains still buried in the Fields of Flanders. I penned the poem 'Poppies Remember', which […]

https://carolinestreetblog.wordpress.com/2026/04/03/painted-poppies-and-poesy/

Listen to Sheena Wellington & Karine Polwart sing Violet Jacob’s poignant poem “Hallowe’en” to Jim Reid’s setting:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FisdvJmgVNY

#Scottish #literature #poem #poetry #song #Halloween #warpoem #warpoetry #ww1

Halloween ~ Sheena Wellington and Karine Polwart

YouTube

But gin the auld fowks’ tales are richt
An’ ghaists come hame on Hallow nicht,
O freend o’ freends! what wad I gie
To feel ye rax yer hand to me
Atween the dark an’ caun’le-licht?

—Violet Jacob, “Hallowe’en”
first published in COUNTRY LIFE, 1920

Jacob’s only son, Harry, was killed at the Somme in 1916

#Scottish #literature #poem #poetry #Halloween #warpoem #warpoetry #WW1

Aifter the boombers cleck
and the sodgers traik thro the skau
there’s an auld air sterts up –
bubblin and greetin.

It’s a ballant mithers sing
on their hunkers i the stour
for a bairn deid.

They ken it by hert.

—Alastair Mackie, “Pietà”
published in The Golden Treasury of Scottish Verse, @canongatebooks, 2021

#Scottish #literature #Scots #Scotslanguage #poem #poetry #warpoem #warpoetry

The First Battle of the Somme began #OTD, 1 July, 1916. Violet Jacob’s only child, Harry, was killed in action in the battle. Jacob’s war poems are some of the most poignant & affecting works from the Home Front.

“To A.H.J.”, from MORE SONGS OF ANGUS & OTHERS (1918)

#Scottish #literature #poem #poetry #warpoem #warpoetry #Somme #WW1 #FirstWorldwar

Upon the street they lie
Beside the broken stone:
The blood of children stares from the broken stone.

—William Soutar, “The Children”
Written in 1937 in response to the bombing of Guernica
Published here in PEACE AND WAR (Oxford University Press, 1989)

#Scottish #literature #poem #poetry #WarPoem #WarPoetry

(This post is being modified)

But Davie’s deid!
Nae mair gude nor ill can betide him.
We happit him doun by Beaumont toun,
And the half o’ my hert’s in the mools aside him.

“Home Thoughts from Abroad”—one of John Buchan’s First World War poems, in Scots

#Scottish #literature #20thcentury #JohnBuchan #Scots #Scotslanguage #WarPoetry #WarPoem #WW1

5/6
https://asls.org.uk/publications/books/volumes/from_the_line/

Annual Volume 43 (2013)

Edited by David Goldie and Roderick Watson Hardback, 232 pages ASLS, Glasgow, March 2014 Price: £12.50 ISBN 9781906841164 Order from our bookshop “The poems in this superb and revelatory collection…

Association for Scottish Literature
Is this the last #love #poem I will ever write? Is the world a fit place for love, or should I start writing #war #poetry, #poems of #militancy and #revolution? Poems about #barricades?
#LovePoetry #LovePoem #WarPoetry #WarPoem