David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • PIPER LAIDLAW OF LOOS

    The Allies were waiting to go over the top

    to attack a weak enemy position.

    The British used gas for the first time.

    Unfortunately, after a half an hour,

    the wind changed and it all blew back

    over the King’s Own Scottish Borderers.

    Unsurprisingly, the men were distressed.

    Lieutenant Young called out, “Pipe them together,

    Laidlaw, for God’s sake, pipe them together.”

    And the forty year old veteran climbed

    the ladder, tuned his pipes and marched back and fore

    along the parapet, playing first

    ‘The Blue Bonnets O’er The Border’ – about

    Bonnie Prince Charlie’s invasion of England –

    and then ‘The Standard On The Braes O’Mar’ –

    about the raising of the Jacobite flag.

    He marched until shrapnel in his leg downed him

    then, sitting, played on. And the laddies were

    ‘piped together’ and went over the top.

    They were almost immediately

    in enfilade from the German gunners

    in an abandoned factory. Nothing

    was achieved. No ground was gained or lost.

    Piper Laidlaw VC died nearly eighty

    and was buried in an unmarked grave.

     

    This almanac of ironies is truly

    beyond satire for something in this story –

    and the paintings, photographs, footage

    of other Pipe Majors playing the pibroch

    on other parapets, in No-Man’s-Land –

    moves to tears not laughter: certainly

    the music – the chanter and the drone –

    the selflessness, of course, and, perhaps,

    the conviction that their history

    and their traditions would transcend misfortune.

     

     

     



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