ARI Smart Content - Data Table

Click to show on right, Sources for Song below
Bargery Number 690
Printer or Publisher Simpkin Marshall & Co / John Menzies & Co
Author Alexander Anderson of Kirconell (1845-1909)
Earliest Date 1862
Evidence for Earliest Date Anderson became a surfaceman or platelayer on the Glasgow and South-western railway in 1862. The work probably dates from later than 1873 when the first collection of his work A Song of Labour, and other poems was published. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Anderson_(poet)]
Latest Date 1877
Evidence for Latest Date Date of author's prefatory note to the source text.
Source of Text Songs of the Rail by Alexander Anderson pp 110-113
Where Printed London / Edinburgh & Glasgow
Roud Not in the Roud Index
First Line BACK on the wrong line, that was all,
Comments on Song Accidental death of railway workers was a frequent topic of Anderson's work
Source Title Duncan Weir
Origin Poem

Duncan Weir

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BACK on the wrong line, that was all,
    Back in the morning, dusky and drear,
Simple enough such a thing you may call,
    But it cost us the life of Duncan Weir.

He was our mate for many a day;
    Never a steadier man on the line,
First at his work on the iron way,
    Whether the morning was stormy or fine.

Quiet, yet fond of a laugh and a joke,
    Though at times he took other moods, and then
He would only look up for a five minutes' smoke,
    Then take to the shovel and pick again.

We liked him, for Duncan was kind of heart,
    And a kindly heart has a kindly speech,
But one dreary morning put us apart,
    And our mate was forever out of our reach.

I was standing that morning a pace from the door,
    When up came one of our men and said,
"Ready! for Duncan is on before,"
    So we took to the rail with a hasty tread.

But just as we stood on the top of the bank,
    Three white lights at once through the darkness
            burst;
And with steady, oily, monotonous clank,
    An engine shot past us with tender first.

I half leapt over the bank as the glare
    Of the head-light beckon'd along the track,
Then taking one look—"That is old Tom Blair,
    And he's back on the wrong line," I said to Jack.

"Blair?" echoed Jack, and he turn'd to me,
    "Yes! for the lamps made his number plain,
He has been to the tank for water, you see,
    And come down on the wrong line in front of his
            train.

"We stood till the engine was out of our view,
    Then I felt at my heart the chill touch of a fear;
My mate said nothing, though well I knew,
    Like myself he was thinking of Duncan Weir.

For Duncan, who always had ways of his own,
    From his very first start on the line, took pains
To walk to and back from his work when alone,
    On the four-feet_way¹, with his face to the trains.

We bent with a hasty footstep our way
    Down the line, till, at once with a clutch of the hand,
My mate drew me back to where something lay
    Dim and dark in the four-feet, just where you stand.

My heart beat fast as I leapt the rail;
    One touch was enough, and with wild affright,
I said in a voice that was like to fail,
    "My God, it is Duncan; run back for a light."

When the lamp came up, and its light was shed,
    Like a great round flashing eye on the place,
There was our old mate Duncan,—dead—
    Struck from behind, for he lay on his face.

Well, little was said—just a question or two
    At the driver.   But all taking place in the dark
Gave him room to deny, so it past from view,
    And all that is left is that simple mark.

Just his name on the fence—take a step this way,—
    You can see it from here with the day and date,
When old Tom Blair, while the morning was grey,
    Came back on the wrong line and kill'd our mate.

3 across Articles in this Category: click a link

Absent Minded Ganger

bar566: Dates 1899~1900|

Complaint about a ganger who works his men dangerously hard.

Economies With Lights

bar102: Dates ----~1882|

Sardonic complaint about the dangerous lack of lights on locomotives.

High Shields Goods Yard Lights

bar569: Dates 1900~1900|

Complaint about the dangerous lack of rail yard lighting.

Shunting Pole Inspector

bar225: Dates 1898~1898|

A group of shunters celebrate the absence of their shunting pole inspector and regret his return after only one week.

More Work for the Undertaker

bar252: Dates ----~1895|

Includes a verse in which a shunter is killed by an engine.

Old Wylie's Stone

bar291: Dates ----~1878|

Poem ~ A track worker is killed by a train

Onward ~ A Tale of the S.E. Railway

bar300: Dates ----~----|

A Signalman does his duty and puts his daughter's life in danger.

Parting, The

bar579: Dates ----~1898|

Marking the separation of two track maintenance workers after 30 years of friendship.

Jim's Whistle

bar687: Dates 1862~1877|

A deaf and dumb track worker is killed by a train.

Pointsman's Story

bar723: Dates ----~----|

Tall-tale of disaster averted.

Duncan Weir

bar690: Dates 1862~1877|

A track worker is killed by a train running on the wrong line.

Bill's Length

bar693: Dates 1862~1877|

A track worker is killed by a train driven by his brother.

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