This blog post was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

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Bruce Bucknell

Former British Deputy High Commissioner Kolkata

Part of UK in Minsk

12th September 2014

The Pity of War

August is a holiday month in much of Europe.  It’s a good time to take stock, read the books that have waited long on the shelf, and explore new places.

The war that is still going on

This August marked one hundred years of the start of the First World War, when the armies of the various European empires went to fight in a war that they expected to be over by Christmas.  In July, I saw copies of the sculptures “Grieving Parents” by the German artist Käthe Kollwitz that were being transported from Vladslo in Belgium, where Kollwitz’s son died in the First World War, to Rzhev in Russia where her grandson died in the Second World War.

parents

On 1st August, I attended the opening of a new memorial complex to the First World War in Smargon, north east of Minsk.  The town was on the frontline of the Eastern Front for nearly two years and was completely destroyed.

monument

Then a week later, I drove westwards from Minsk to Gdansk via Masuria, north-east Poland, that before 1939 was part of Eastern Prussia, where the first battles of the First World War took place.

cemetery

I also visited the newly opened museum of the Great Patriotic War in Minsk.

museum

There were extensive commemorations in Britain and other parts of Europe for the start of the First World War.  Several British newspapers carried opinion pieces that noted the legacy of the conflict lives on.  Despite the terrible experiences of the 20th century wars, there is still fighting in Europe, in south east Ukraine.  There are still grieving parents in Europe.

 Martial glory or remembrance for the dead?

As I noted in an earlier blog, the experience of the First World War is seared into the imagination of many Britons.  I sometimes worry that the history sections of British bookshops have too many books on military history.  But we have an outstanding museum – the Imperial War Museum whose aim is “to provide and encourage, the study and understanding of the history of modern war and ‘wartime experience’”.

A colleague pointed out that the narrative from Soviet times in this part of the world is more about martial glory than the pity of war and remembrance for the dead.  Having seen many memorials to the Great Patriotic War, I agree that they tend to emphasise the victories rather than commemorate the loss of life.  I suppose it’s understandable given that the Red Army was fighting on its homeland.

I’m not sure it is the case with monuments in Belarus.  The main sculptures at Smargon include those of ordinary soldiers and of women who suffered in the First World War.  The new museum of the Great Patriotic War in Minsk has extensive exhibits about the wider conflict, and even a copy of the secret, additional protocol of the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression Pact.

The pity of war in Wilfred Owen’s poetry

The phrase “the pity of war” comes from Wilfred Owen, a British poet of the First World War.  I realise that this phrase may need explaining to non-native readers.

It comes from some linesOwen jotted down for a draft preface of a collection of his poems that he hoped to publish:

This book is not about heroes. English poetry is not yet fit to speak of them.

Nor is it about deeds, or lands, nor anything about glory, honour, might, majesty, dominion, or power, except War.

Above all I am not concerned with Poetry.

My subject is War, and the pity of War.

The Poetry is in the pity.

Yet these elegies are to this generation in no sense consolatory.  They may be to the next.  All a poet can do today is warn.  That is why the true Poets must be truthful.

Owen served in the British army for the latter two years of the war.  He had not enlisted at the start of the war – he was in fact working as a teacher in southern France.  However, he felt it was his duty to return home and volunteer – the British government didn’t introduce conscription until 1916.

When Owen reached the frontlines of the Western Front, he was appalled at the conditions he found in the trenches.  He wrote extensively about his experiences to his mother, to whom he was close.  But he put his most graphic writing into his poems where he wrote very bluntly about the horrors he experienced.

His depiction of a victim of a gas attack in “Dulce et Decorum est”, dreams of meeting an enemy he had killed in “Strange meeting”, or the re-enactment of a funeral ceremony on the battlefield in “Anthem for Doomed Youth”, are powerful.

Owen died just one week before the armistice in 1918.  When he died, he was virtually unknown as a poet.  But he had met another poet, Siegfried Sassoon, when both were at a hospital in Edinburgh during the war, and Sassoon championed Owen’s poetry after his death.  Despite his limited output, Owen is probably the most popular English war poet.

Battles lost and won

In contrast to the First World War, there was an outpouring of books and films glorifying British military successes in the Second World War.  Perhaps that is not surprising because the reasons we fought that war were far more obvious – in opposing the ghastliness of the fascist regimes – and there was a clear victory achieved with our Soviet Allies.

That flow had abated by the time I became an adult in the 1980s.  Now, our national narrative about the wars of the 20th century – and war in general – is mostly about remembrance of the dead and their sacrifices – the pity of war.  As the most distinguished of British generals – the Duke of Wellington, who fought many years against Napoleon’s armies – had said a century earlier:  “nothing, except a battle lost, can be half so melancholy as a battle won”.

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Related posts:

Neighbours

70 Years On

Reviewing History to Look beyond the Myths: 1914 Revisited

1 comment on “The Pity of War

  1. Thanks Bruce, interesting thoughts and let’s hope the obsession for war that seems to be breaking out everywhere at the moment goes away very soon, but history is full of it and humans seem always hell bent on continuing to involve themselves in it and even enjoying it or is it just our leaders, anyway you would think that by now we would have learnt a few lessons, but apparently not.

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About Bruce Bucknell

Bruce was the British Deputy High Commissioner in Kolkata from 2016 to 2019. Previously he was Ambassador in Minsk from July 2012 to January 2016. Bruce grew up on a…

Bruce was the British Deputy High Commissioner in Kolkata from 2016 to 2019. Previously he was Ambassador in Minsk from July 2012 to January 2016.

Bruce grew up on a farm in southern England and enjoys walking in the countryside and visiting wild places.

He studied modern history at Durham University, and takes a keen interest in the history of the places he visits.

Bruce used to play cricket when he could see the ball. Now he enjoys watching cricket and many other sports in his spare time.

He has had a varied career in the Foreign Office. Between his postings to Amman (1988-91), Milan (1995-9) and Madrid (2003-7), he has spent much of his career in London mostly dealing with Europe and Africa.

He is married with two grown up sons.