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#1917
George's father stares at Polly. "How is George?" he asks eyeing the young maid who cares for his shell-shocked son. Polly studies the man behind the desk how his eyes search her. "He has moments of nerves but I manage to calm him" she replies pushing from her mind she and George in bed the night before. "I have received a letter asking about him from his regiment commander" he says "asking about his possible return to the Front." Polly's eyes betray a fear. "He can't" she says "he's not well enough." His eyes pierce her. "It is not your opinion he will be asking" he says sitting forward in his chair. "If it wasn't for me he'd be locked away in some asylum". Polly says not thinking as she speaks. He looks at her. "I know he thinks you are his wife but you are not" Polly stands up straight looking at him. "But all the time he does I am" she replies seeing George making love to her twice in the night behind her eyes.
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Apr 21, 2018
Apr 21, 2018 at 4:09 AM UTC
Polly and the Master 1917.
Polly watches the sun rise into the room. She lies beside George in his bed. It was the only way to calm him down last night. He thought he saw snipers in the trees over the way. He sleeps still. Eyes shut and eyelids like smooth shells. She didn't think he would be able to perform but he did. As if nothing much had changed. But he was not the same. The War has blunted his sense of humour. Twice in the night. At one time he shook the bed with the nerves going off. She lies still gazing at him there. The thin dark moustache. The lips still. What if he had died? Shell shock is a kind of death she muses. Where to go from here? He thinks she's his wife and not the maid he used to bed while on leave. His parents are not happy about her being with him most of the time. But she alone can calm him if he loses his nerve and shouts and screams and shakes. She is supposed to sleep next door in the adjoining room but he wanted her in his bed. It had been nearly a year since he last made love to her before he went back to the trenches and the Front. She can sense him close to her. She wants him inside her again and again. She had best get up in case someone comes along and sees her in his bed. She rises up and goes to the adjoining room to wash and dress and brush her hair which is in a mess.
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Mar 27, 2018
Mar 27, 2018 at 8:23 AM UTC
Sleeping with George 1917.
You watched George undress for bed, made sure he didn't slip or fall with the shakes. He had caused a scene at dinner and his mother asked you to take him back to his room. He thought you his wife and not the maid. The shell shock had disrupted his thoughts and nerves. He stood there naked staring at the wall. You picked up his pyjamas and dressed him. He was pliant and stared at you. Polly, what has become of us? he said. He had tears in his eyes. We are safe, George, you said. His hands began to shake again. You held him close to you sensing him shake and cry. You didn't know the sights and sounds that haunted him; what the War had done was visible before your eyes: in his eyes an old world died and a world cursed by lies.
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Mar 6, 2018
Mar 6, 2018 at 3:57 PM UTC
Putting George To Bed 1917
George sat at the dining table for evening dinner. It was the first time he had been down to dinner in many months, since being sent home with shell shock in 1916. He sat quiet, staring at his sister who sat opposite. Other guests sat along each side of the long table, and his father sat at the top end and his mother at the other end. He wanted to shut out the chatter; it grounded on his fragile nerves. The man next to him (lord something or other) tried to engaged him in conversation about the War, but George turned and gazed at the man, gazed at his moustache rising and falling as he spoke, the words floating in the air like wounded birds. His sister said: George doesn't talk of the War, he finds it disturbing. The man looked at the sister: I suppose he must; are on your leave then, Sir? George turned away. He wanted his wife. Where was she? He searched along the table on either side, ignoring the man next to him. Where's Polly? He said anxiously to his sister. His sister leaned forward: Polly is busy, George, you will see her later, the sister said in a soft voice. I WANT HER NOW! George bellowed, his hands shaking, his eyes staring along the table. His mother got up from the table and went around to George who had pushed back his chair and was standing shaking. Calm, George, she said. She put an arm about him and began to lead him from the dining room. The guests stared in silence. Polly who had been outside waiting to take meals in, came in and spoke quietly to the mother, and taking George's hand led him from the room. George is suffering from shell shock, his father said, he has not quite got through with it yet. The guests nodded and spoke in soften voices offering apologises and words of sadness and such as guests do. George held tight to Polly's hand. Who are those people? He said, his hands shaking, his eyes staring around him. Just dinner party guests, George, Polly said, leading him up the stairs, wondering what the butler will say about her entering the dining room other than as a maid. They climbed up the stairs; George crouched down thinking the bright lights were flares.
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Feb 12, 2018
Feb 12, 2018 at 12:19 PM UTC
George at Dinner 1917.
George sat at the dining table for evening dinner. It was the first time he had been down to dinner in many months, since being sent home with shell shock in 1916. He sat quiet, staring at his sister who sat opposite. Other guests sat along each side of the long table, and his father sat at the top end and his mother at the other end. He wanted to shut out the chatter; it grounded on his fragile nerves. The man next to him (lord something or other) tried to engaged him in conversation about the War, but George turned and gazed at the man, gazed at his moustache rising and falling as he spoke, the words floating in the air like wounded birds. His sister said: George doesn't talk of the War, he finds it disturbing. The man looked at the sister: I suppose he must; are on your leave then, Sir? George turned away. He wanted his wife. Where was she? He searched along the table on either side, ignoring the man next to him. Where's Polly? He said anxiously to his sister. His sister leaned forward: Polly is busy, George, you will see her later, the sister said in a soft voice. I WANT HER NOW! George bellowed, his hands shaking, his eyes staring along the table. His mother got up from the table and went around to George who had pushed back his chair and was standing shaking. Calm, George, she said. She put an arm about him and began to lead him from the dining room. The guests stared in silence. Polly who had been outside waiting to take meals in, came in and spoke quietly to the mother, and taking George's hand led him from the room. George is suffering from shell shock, his father said, he has not quite got through with it yet. The guests nodded and spoke in soften voices offering apologises and words of sadness and such as guests do. George held tight to Polly's hand. Who are those people? He said, his hands shaking, his eyes staring around him. Just dinner party guests, George, Polly said, leading him up the stairs, wondering what the butler will say about her entering the dining room other than as a maid. They climbed up the stairs; George crouched down thinking the bright lights were flares.
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103
I helped old Albert to his room and he softy said: sit a while, I want to tell you something I’ve told no one before. So I sat in the chair by his bed. Mud, you would never believe the amount of mud; bomb craters big and deep filled with ***** men drowned in them if they slipped off the boards especially at night. My friend Charlie died like that: wandered off and slipped and drowned. Knee high in places and deeper in others. Young men fresh out to the Front cried out when dying for their mothers; waiting to go over the top when the whistle blew you knew it was them or you. He paused and stared at me with glassy eyes. Beyond the news they broadcast home was the dark reality of hell; rats, lice, mud and blood and dead mens' eyes and limbs or bodies lying out in No Man's Land. O yes, sometimes we sat and smoked, laughed and joked, thought of home and fire sides and the girls we left behind; but always the War was on your mind.
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Sep 16, 2017
Sep 16, 2017 at 2:48 AM UTC
ALWAYS ON YOUR MIND 1917.
The remains of a soldier laid on a muddy plank of wood, and that was the first day at the Front. George pushed the memory aside like an annoying fly, but it stayed there as he watched Polly make up his bed. And the hand sticking out of the trench, a wedding ring still visible discoloured by blood. George studied the maid as she moved, how she smoothed down the cover with the side of her palm. He wished she  could smooth out the memories stuck his head: the calls of the wounded and faces of the dead.
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Sep 9, 2017
Sep 9, 2017 at 12:36 PM UTC
Remains 1917.
George's father called Polly into his study. She had been there a few times before as a maid but this was different. Sit down, Polly, he said. She sat down, all the time looking at him, taking in his greying hair and that moustache of his and those dark eyes piecing at her. How is George? he asked. He is a little better, she replied. His mother said he ignored her when she came to see him the other day, his father said. He doesn't talk to anyone much, Polly replied. He talks to you, his father said, why not others? I don't know, Polly replied. The day before walking with him in the grounds he spoke only a few words. How noisy the birds were, he had said. And that time the other night as Polly was putting him to bed, he had taken her hand and said: come to bed. But she hadn’t; she said, later, George, but never did. That would be unfair to him and her, she thought, not like the old days before the war, or before his shell-shock, when she and he made love in his bed at his request. Has he improved at all since he returned home? his father said. I think he is slowly, Polly said. I would have tried to get him a man to take care of him, but he seems better with you and if I got a man he might go backwards, the father said. I'll take care of him, Polly said, all the time he needs me. His father studied her, his eyes searching her, and she wondered if he knew about her and his son before this, knew about the *** and such, but if he did he didn't say or give any hint or say as much.
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Aug 6, 2017
Aug 6, 2017 at 3:23 AM UTC
STUDIED IN THE STUDY 1917.
George's father called Polly into his study. She had been there a few times before as a maid but this was different. Sit down, Polly, he said. She sat down, all the time looking at him, taking in his greying hair and that moustache of his and those dark eyes piecing at her. How is George? he asked. He is a little better, she replied. His mother said he ignored her when she came to see him the other day, his father said. He doesn't talk to anyone much, Polly replied. He talks to you, his father said, why not others? I don't know, Polly replied. The day before walking with him in the grounds he spoke only a few words. How noisy the birds were, he had said. And that time the other night as Polly was putting him to bed, he had taken her hand and said: come to bed. But she hadn’t; she said, later, George, but never did. That would be unfair to him and her, she thought, not like the old days before the war, or before his shell-shock, when she and he made love in his bed at his request. Has he improved at all since he returned home? his father said. I think he is slowly, Polly said. I would have tried to get him a man to take care of him, but he seems better with you and if I got a man he might go backwards, the father said. I'll take care of him, Polly said, all the time he needs me. His father studied her, his eyes searching her, and she wondered if he knew about her and his son before this, knew about the *** and such, but if he did he didn't say or give any hint or say as much.
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They're out there George said peering out the window of his room. Polly who had been making his bed looked over at him. Who are George? she said. They think I can't see them but I do creeping along there by the trenches. She came across and stood beside him and looked out the window. Cows moved in the field over the way tails wagging slow. They shot Briggs right through the head and he was beside me one minute he was talking next gone a hole through his forehead. They won't get me like that he said. It'll be all right George just keep near me. She held his arm a cow moved behind the hedge. Back back George said and held her close and away from the window his eyes large and staring. She kissed his cheek he turned and gazed at her his eyes frightened looking. They won't **** me will they? No George not now she said holding him. He stared ahead his eyes watching a moving cow.
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Jun 30, 2017
Jun 30, 2017 at 3:27 AM UTC
GEORGE BROKEN MINDED 1917.
George walked to the door of his room. Polly who had been sitting by the window said where are you going? I need fresh air he said. He went out she followed he walked along the passage down the stairs his footsteps walking slow on each step. She kept him in view wondering if he was going to have another turn. He crossed the hall looking straight ahead. She followed him walking past the new maid who had replaced her a timid girl who now shared the room and bed with Sally the maid she once slept with before George came home from the War shell shocked. George opened the front door went out into the grounds. Polly followed closed the door after her. She watched as he stopped by the trees peered at the horizon. She walked close to him. They're out there some place he said. Who are George? she said. The *** he said. He stared at the trees in the distant swaying. See their big guns? he said. She watched the trees sway. Keep behind me he said to her snipers out there he pointed across the grounds. There was no one there just the wind and birds no war sounds.
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May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 11:11 AM UTC
ANOTHER WAR 1917.
George lies on his bed in the dark. I sit in the chair by the window curtains drawn. I could have gone through to the room next door adjoined by a door where his man used to sleep before the War. He joined George's regiment but was killed just after George's brain gave way on the Somme. I sit in case he wakes and panics if I'm not here. His parents are not happy that I am here with him but he insists I am his wife not the maid he used to bed while home on leave and before. The nurse he had left after George refused to have her in the room and only me to be there. I wish he was well and back to how he was not this broken man who lies on his bed in the  dark moaning through another nightmare. I peer through the slit where the curtains meet.   I see a narrow wedge of field and trees and sky. I wonder what god it was who brought George back but left his man to die.
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Apr 28, 2017
Apr 28, 2017 at 9:50 AM UTC
POLLY IN THE DARK 1917.
Having put George to bed and after making sure he was asleep Polly goes to the adjoining room where she has the bed which was once set aside for guests. She closes the door and looks around the room. It is the best room she has ever stayed in better by far than the room in the attic she once shared with the other maid Susie. There it was cold and she had to share the bed with Susie who spent a good part of the night hugging her. Now she could sleep in a bed all by herself and a bed comfortable and warm. She wishes she could share George's bed as she used to when he came home on leave from the War but now since his return mentally broken she can only watch as he struggles with his demons and fears and sights seen. But if he hadn't been so attached to her and imagined she was his wife she would still be in the double bed with Susie up in the attic. She undresses and puts on the nightgown and climbs into bed alone. She hugs the pillow and wishes George was there kissing her and making love to her as he used to do in those stolen nights. George asleep in his own bed sees frightful and deadly wartime sights.
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Apr 6, 2017
Apr 6, 2017 at 3:41 AM UTC
IN BED ALONE 1917.
George's silent staring out the window his mother watches him as she stands beside him. She has sent the maid out below stairs so that she his mother can have him to herself. What's out there? She asks him. There's snipers he whispers. She looks out at the fields and hedgerows the tall oaks swaying slow. How many? She asks him. Where's my wife? He asks her looking up with his eyes hauntedly. She's gone out she replies. There's danger I told you he mutters the snipers. She'll be back pretty soon she answers. Polly stands by the door of the hall looking out at the drive. She's been sent from the room leaving George alone with his mother. Listen George why don't you come downstairs for dinner we have guests his mother says to him. Where's Polly? He asks her. She'll be back she answers wishing her son was well that his nerves weren't so bad. There's one there he shouts out his finger pointing out at the hedgerow get down low he utters ducking down out of sight pulling his mother down beside him. His mother looks at him and then sighs seeing tears welling up in his eyes.
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Mar 9, 2017
Mar 9, 2017 at 2:23 PM UTC
GEORGE'S ****** 1917.
The nurse had left. George had improved little, but got angry when the nurse was about, and was only calmed when Polly was in attendance; so His father let the nurse go and allowed Polly to nurse him. Dudman didn't like it, but could do nothing about it; another maid was employed to cover Polly's duties. George sat in chair by the window staring out, January sun was dull in the sky, clouds drifted slowly. Polly tidied up the bed and arranged George's clothes by the side. Look at them, George said, pointing out the window, creeping along the trench. Polly went to the window and peered out where George pointed. The old gardener and his boy walked along by the hedge carrying tools. Germans, Polly, see them, where's my gun? George said anxiously. Polly stood beside him: it's Cartwright and his boy walking by the hedge, George, she said softly. George peered hard: Not Germans? No not Germans, Polly affirmed. George sighed, held Polly's hand. Look like Germans, he said. She wished he was well again, not unhinged by shells and gunfire. Shell shock, the doctor had said, who came the other week after George had a bad attack of nerves and shouted and hit out at the nurse. Only Polly calmed him down and he held her as he wept. Dunton was there, George said suddenly, one minute there next gone, blown apart, blood on me and his arm in the trench a few feet away. Polly hugged him, kissed his head. George saw about him the walking dead.
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Feb 5, 2017
Feb 5, 2017 at 8:55 AM UTC
WALKING DEAD 1917.
The first great war took many people But it was just a start for worse It took the best of us, the livers To revolution's ****** horse This war erased aristocracy This war had eat my own home land Kurmysh was town at Sura river Untill they came, soviet's undead A part of us was pushed from home lands Another part had shot in head They called themselves a freedom bringers But that was thing old Lenin said While winners write the history The truth becomes a mystery Then bandits become heroes And heroes gone to dust And now, the robbers, killers Are called a freedom givers In part of lost empire Ukraine, which now are sold
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Nov 30, 2014
Nov 30, 2014 at 6:22 PM UTC
rewritten history