A Collection of poems about World War One. |
*Cherry Tree* When I thought that I no longer had tears enough to moisten the darkening pupils and pearly whites, something sunk through and caused me to break away once more and chase the swifts that landed on the roof. Smile and choke I did but could not understand why. As I hummed the world thundered on; they’re not interested in one me and can’t hear the sounds of one fallen… cherry. Sweet and round but sometimes bitter; married to a stalk that splinters and as it rips it’s tossed aside; it has no purpose once its lover’s died. Fear and loss glides me high but all I can imagine is a place to die. Where all that could be and ever has been, rests above me on the blossoms of the cherry tree. *Day After Day* Dawn was a red haze on the horizon. The air was humid, the ground hollow, and silence struck as each hour twitched by. A whisper in the trenches brought a new life to the land. A spark—just four hundred yards away— was followed by the rapid rumble of thousands of manic machines; thirsty for flesh. Dirt danced as shrapnel shimmered but it darkened as it fell into the black holes of no-mans land. Another man fell but his fall was silenced, by the constant battering boom of beating bombs. The sunshine lightened the earth and the human storm slowed but each charted casualty dreamt of a quick death as the days thundered on. *Frozen* They sit there in their concrete caves shouting, ‘cheer up, men—you’ll be home for Christmas!’ Either in a coffin or beneath a white cross, says I who can assure you of the truth. For whilst they grin away their days, we sit out here and pray because we know our use is limited. *The Kids Die Too* When I was a child, My mummy bought me a lollipop. We were poor. When the war began I was fifteen. I died then too. The death was plain. I joined to make the family Some had earned bobs; We would not be poor anymore. Five seconds it took. I saw my guts after two. Reminded me of the butchers Just down Dove Road; Bob Smithy ran the place. I served with his son, Drew. He died too. Just after me. We didn’t last a day In the Great War. *Mother, Wives, Aunts and Daughters* She swiped her hand across her face and twisted the handle of the spade, challenged the potential her body could bring for her Country and for the King. The Mothers, Wives, Aunts and Daughters knew their lads had been sent to the slaughter but no mass chaos in a foreign land could prevent the ability of a modern hand. Filth divided the marks on her face as she curled the dirt in haste, hoping for a second seasons worth of crops so that there was food enough to feed the flock. She dropped the spade and pulled at her husbands trousers, knowing damn well he’d never need them, ‘bugger them all,’ she’d said when she heard the news but her friends knew bloodier thoughts were her true view. The Mothers, Wives, Aunts and Daughters knew their lads had been sent to the slaughter but none of them would justify the thousands of deaths brought upon their generation of men. *Peace* The air was cold and a thick mist haunted the dying grass. Murder was in the land and as the world cleared, the horizon was spiked with blood. The bones shimmered like silver. Heads floated into light, smiling at the rising sun. Crows chained curiously to the corpses, heads tipped, rip, giggling at their finds. A patchwork of death littered the floor. Trinkets of life sunk into the moist soil; captured for future generations to explore. The foul smell sunk deep into sweet flowers, they become bitter for the near future and winds pull their power over to those who dread fate. Somewhere behind the coils, the stabbing wire, excess shellfire and sleeping souls, shelter those who lay silent; forever doomed. The air was warm and a shimmer of light hunted the dying youth. *Summer* That long hot summer we wasted away so many of the days as our bodies crushed the shells beneath our feet and golden grains pressed between our toes. One after the other we paraded along the water, wishing the sun to keep on shining so our bodies browned could enjoy the richness of a free life. We danced with each other as seagulls sung and were diving to try and steal our tissues and cans. Triangular wings blustered in the winds and a Childs toy flag of skull and bones waved at us playfully. We sipped away the percentages and chewed at the corned beef sandwiches; our strength lingered on the shore as we smiled at the passers by who took advantage just as we did. The castles in the ground exploded as young ones ran around recklessly and we covered our mouths whenever a slight gust of wind blew at the earth. *The Game* The die twists over the corpse. It’s weeping. The skin is raw; sundried. Bristly hair in clumps. Male. The face has crumbled into itself. Shattered. Hollow. He gambled for his life. He lost. Now they play. *Tommy’s Lament* Our faces may be pale and gaunt but our hearts they drum ever on. Even when our limbs lay buried six feet under the chequered soil you will remember us as we were full of life, our blood only slightly spilt. When you are old and we are young; artillery will dance before our eyes, as you remember the ones who sacrificed their souls so that you could live a safer life. |