On Receiving News of the War is a poem by Isaac Rosenberg which he wrote after hearing of the outbreak of World War I while in Cape Town, South Africa. Unusually, it takes an anti-war stance in contrast to much of the initial patriotic poetry produced during the early months of the war.
This poem was published in 1922, in London. It was one of his most famous poems, but it did not gain success until 1948.
Snow is a strange white word.<br> No ice or frost<br> Has asked of bud or bird<br> For Winter's cost.
Yet ice and frost and snow<br> From earth to sky<br> This Summer land doth know.<br> No man knows why.
In all men's hearts it is.<br> Some spirit old<br> Hath turned with malign kiss<br> Our lives to mould.
Red fangs have torn His face.<br> God's blood is shed.<br> He mourns from His lone place<br> His children dead.
O! ancient crimson curse!<br> Corrode, consume.<br> Give back this universe<br> Its pristine bloom. <br>