http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
This poem can also be found in my gay-interest blog archives for September 2010.
Yes, let us remember always...not only our war dead and their families - among them, many LGBT people - but also those wounded in wars past and present and their continuing battle with pain just for getting on with their everyday lives in ways so many of us take for granted. We owe them, all of them ...and how!
Ah, but when will humankind ever learn? Oh, when will we ever learn...?
LAST POST
They shot me down on foreign soil
and the first sound I heard was a child’s cry
at the moment of birth
and I wished the child and parents well,
that they would see a kinder end
than me, wracked with pain, no less so
for knowing I would never see
either homeland or loved ones again
yet had done my best (can anyone
do more?) and had no regrets but one
about fighting a war like this
A continuing absence of peace
They lay a black cloth over my face
so I should not see comrades close to tears
for the worst of fears
we put behind us who fight such wars
as we don’t always understand
but do our duty though it be in a land
as far away from the pub
on the corner of our street as heaven
from hell where they all but meet
here in Afghanistan
A continuing absence of peace
They put me in a box and closed the lid
so I would not feel the tears of passing clouds
on the journey home
or hear the strains of the Last Post
acknowledge me gone
nor see the flags lowered as silent crowds
line the streets of a small town
taking me to their hearts as if I were one
of their own, as they have done
for others like me, making our journey
less lonely for this
A lasting empathy with peace
The first sound I heard as they lowered me
into the earth was a child’s cry at the moment
of birth and I wished the child
and parents well in a kinder world than this
that saw me fight to save it
from a hell of its own making, no less so
for centuries of tradition
and a culture of oppression seeking
to break free while keeping faith
with its finer principles and (far) kinder
ways than this
A continuing absence of peace
“A good person, worthy sacrifice, fine soldier...”
Too late, I cannot hear.
Copyright R. N. Taber 1999, 2010
This second poem is a villanelle, written July 2009 to mark the death of Harry Patch, the last British veteran of the First World War.
A FEELING FOR PEACE AND QUIET
On old Memory Lane, all is quiet
for those who fought a war to end war
so we may make our peace with it
Among cries of the fallen, a shout,
(At ’em lads, at ’em, that’s the score!);
on old Memory Lane all is quiet
They bore old age, faces firmly set
to do them proud who had gone before
so we may make our peace with it
We will always be in their debt,
dead and wounded on a foreign shore;
on old Memory Lane all is quiet
We must never even try to forget
those whose freedom’s colours wore
so we may make our peace with it
War, war and still more of it yet;
on the landscape of love, a weeping sore;
on old Memory Lane, all is quiet
so we may make our peace with it
Copyright R. N. Taber 2010
[Note: 'Last Post' first appeared on the Internet in Ygdrasil, an online poetry journal 1999; both poems are included in my collection On the Battlefields of Love by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2010.]
This poem can also be found in my gay-interest blog archives for September 2010.
'They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.' - a stanza from 'For the Fallen' by Robert Laurence Binyon
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.' - a stanza from 'For the Fallen' by Robert Laurence Binyon
(1869-1943) as published in The Times newspaper on 21st September 1914.
Yes, let us remember always...not only our war dead and their families - among them, many LGBT people - but also those wounded in wars past and present and their continuing battle with pain just for getting on with their everyday lives in ways so many of us take for granted. We owe them, all of them ...and how!
Ah, but when will humankind ever learn? Oh, when will we ever learn...?
LAST POST
They shot me down on foreign soil
and the first sound I heard was a child’s cry
at the moment of birth
and I wished the child and parents well,
that they would see a kinder end
than me, wracked with pain, no less so
for knowing I would never see
either homeland or loved ones again
yet had done my best (can anyone
do more?) and had no regrets but one
about fighting a war like this
A continuing absence of peace
They lay a black cloth over my face
so I should not see comrades close to tears
for the worst of fears
we put behind us who fight such wars
as we don’t always understand
but do our duty though it be in a land
as far away from the pub
on the corner of our street as heaven
from hell where they all but meet
here in Afghanistan
A continuing absence of peace
They put me in a box and closed the lid
so I would not feel the tears of passing clouds
on the journey home
or hear the strains of the Last Post
acknowledge me gone
nor see the flags lowered as silent crowds
line the streets of a small town
taking me to their hearts as if I were one
of their own, as they have done
for others like me, making our journey
less lonely for this
A lasting empathy with peace
The first sound I heard as they lowered me
into the earth was a child’s cry at the moment
of birth and I wished the child
and parents well in a kinder world than this
that saw me fight to save it
from a hell of its own making, no less so
for centuries of tradition
and a culture of oppression seeking
to break free while keeping faith
with its finer principles and (far) kinder
ways than this
A continuing absence of peace
“A good person, worthy sacrifice, fine soldier...”
Too late, I cannot hear.
Copyright R. N. Taber 1999, 2010
This second poem is a villanelle, written July 2009 to mark the death of Harry Patch, the last British veteran of the First World War.
A FEELING FOR PEACE AND QUIET
On old Memory Lane, all is quiet
for those who fought a war to end war
so we may make our peace with it
Among cries of the fallen, a shout,
(At ’em lads, at ’em, that’s the score!);
on old Memory Lane all is quiet
They bore old age, faces firmly set
to do them proud who had gone before
so we may make our peace with it
We will always be in their debt,
dead and wounded on a foreign shore;
on old Memory Lane all is quiet
We must never even try to forget
those whose freedom’s colours wore
so we may make our peace with it
War, war and still more of it yet;
on the landscape of love, a weeping sore;
on old Memory Lane, all is quiet
so we may make our peace with it
Copyright R. N. Taber 2010
[Note: 'Last Post' first appeared on the Internet in Ygdrasil, an online poetry journal 1999; both poems are included in my collection On the Battlefields of Love by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2010.]
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