In addition to extracts from the
Ordinary of the Mass, the text incorporates words from other religious and historical sources, including the Islamic
call to prayer, the
Bible (e.g., the
Psalms and
Revelation) and the
Mahabharata. Writers whose words appear in the work include
Rudyard Kipling,
Alfred Lord Tennyson, and
Sankichi Toge, who survived the
Hiroshima bombing but died some years later of leukaemia.
The Armed Man charts the growing menace of a descent into war, interspersed with moments of reflection, shows the horrors that war brings, and ends with the hope for peace in a new millennium, when "sorrow, pain and death can be overcome". It begins with a representation of marching feet, overlaid later by the shrill tones of a
piccolo impersonating the flutes of a military band with the 15th-century French words of
"The Armed Man". After the reflective pause of the Call to Prayer and the
Kyrie, "Save Us From Bloody Men" appeals for God's help against our enemies in words from the
Book of Psalms (
Psalm 59). The
Sanctus has a military, menacing air, followed by Kipling's "
Hymn Before Action". "Charge!" draws on words from
John Dryden's "A song for St. Cecilia's day" (1687) and
Jonathan Swift citing
Horace (Odes 3,2,13), beginning with martial trumpets and song, but ending in the agonised screams of the dying. This is followed by the eerie silence of the battlefield after action, broken by a lone trumpet playing the
Last Post. "Angry Flames" describes the appalling scenes after the bombing of Hiroshima, and "Torches" parallels this with an excerpt from the
Mahabharata (book 1, chapter 228), describing the terror and suffering of animals dying in the burning of the
Khandava Forest.
Agnus Dei is followed by "Now the Guns have Stopped", written by
Guy Wilson himself as part of a Royal Armouries display on the
guilt felt by some returning survivors of World War I. After the
Benedictus, "Better is Peace" ends the mass on a note of hope, drawing on the hard-won understanding of
Lancelot and
Guinevere that peace is better than war, on Tennyson's poem "
Ring Out, Wild Bells" and on the text from : "God shall wipe away all tears". == Derived works ==