I Was
Walking Through the Dockyard in a Panic
(Cyril Tawney 1930 -2005)
I was walking through the dockyard in a panic,
When I met a matelot old and grey,
Upon his back he had his bag and hammock,
And this is what I heard him say.
I wonder, yes I wonder,
Has the Jaunty made a blunder,
When he served this draft chit out for me.
For years I’ve been a stanchion,
I’m the pride of Jago’s mansion,
It’s a shame to send me off to sea.
I like my ‘Pride of Keyham’ and I like my
weekend leave,
And I always bring the Western to the Chief,
(GOOD MORNING CHIEF!).
Oh, I wonder, yes I wonder,
Has the Jaunty made a blunder,
When he served this draft chit out for me.
Shall I wander out to sunny straits in glory,
On a trooper that is chocker block,
If I speak to shipmates who have gone before
me,
They are sure to double up with shock.
I wonder, yes I wonder,
Has the Jaunty made a blunder,
When he served this draft chit out for me.
For though we’ve lots of funnels,
We’re never rolling gunnels,
And I’m always home in time for tea.
I’ve gazed upon the ocean while walking on the
Hoe,
Though I own that that was very long ago,
(SO LONG AGO!).
But t’ain’t no use to holler,
I’ll have to raise a dollar,
And wangle back to R.N.B.
My link
to Cyril Tawney’s ‘bleat’ coming from “a matelot,
old and grey”, is an imagined matelot’s ‘beef’ I have written. As is the custom, a more senior rating listens
patiently to a sailor’s whinging (“ain’t
it awful, ain’t it awful”), and then addresses it with a bigger ‘hard done
by’ story to make it seem the sailor’s concerns are insignificant. In this case, overshadowed by how the loss and
subsequent treatment of HMAS Yarra’s crew played itself out in WWII. HMAS Yarra was a little warship, a Grimsby
class sloop built in Australia. In
August 1940, not long after the outbreak of war with Germany, ‘Yarra’ was sent
as an attachment to the RN Red Sea force and took part in a number of actions
to secure that part of the Middle East for the Allies. She then deployed to the Mediterranean acting
as an escort for shipping between Alexandria and Tobruk. In need of maintenance and repair, ‘Yarra’
was on her way back to Australia when the Japanese invaded Malaya (late 1941). The ship found herself diverted to take up
escort duties for shipping coming in and out of Singapore. That duty continued up until the fall of
Singapore. Then in early 1942, south of
Java in the escort of a merchant convoy HMAS Yarra encountered a Japanese
cruiser squadron. ‘Yarra’ valiantly
sacrificed herself in a futile attempt to protect the convoy (only 13 members
of her crew survived). In spite of HMAS
Yarra’s heroic action (considered to be the bravest act in Australian naval
history), not one of her crew were recommended for nor ever received a medal. A young gunner, Leading Seaman Taylor was
reported to have remained at his action station when abandon ship was called
and kept firing at the enemy to the time he went down with his ship.
The Getting of Medals
medals!?
they don’t give you bloody
medals
for doing your duty mate!
just ask the boys off the Yarra,
why don’t cha!?
that’s right, ya can’t, cos
they’re all bloody dead!
but that being said,
I bet they don’t bleat,
half as much as you! What,
‘cos you happen to be duty,
one in three!
when here we are mate,
alive, still sucking air,
stepping ashore everywhere,
while back on Yarra!
two years away, two bloody
years!
keeping the Red Sea clear,
can you believe it!
four months, mate,
with never a day’s leave,
and then a lousy Bombay
refit,
on bully beef and biscuits,
when excuse me, you get
your duff
every night and still arc
up.
Oh, can’t go to sleep!
‘cos it’s too cold in the
mess deck?
now that takes the cake,
try being on the Yarra, mate,
running bloody air attacks,
in and out of Tobruk and
back,
you don’t know flogged on
your feet,
you don’t know hot,
not ‘til you’ve served on a
sloop
in the Mediterranean,
then follow that up,
with being told,
you’re going home, mate,
to oh,
there’s been a change of
plan,
you’re now acting convoy
escort,
Sunda Strait to Singapore.
How do you feel? How do ya
feel!
Just doing your duty, mate!
the wife and family can
wait.
Well, they’re waiting a
bloody long time.
You can’t taunt three Jap
cruisers,
and not expect a bruising,
Yarra, or anyone else afloat!
Yeah, medals……….
if they were handing out
medals
for doing your duty, mate,
I’d swim down there to Yarra’s wreck,
and pin one on Squizzy
Taylor’s chest.
Nah, if it’s medals and
bloody life
you’re after, then better
play safe,
and get yourself posted,
mate,
side-boy to an admiral’s
wife!
J. O. White
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