Conscript
By D G Moody
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Conscript.
Vietnam 1969
Bazza and I both rolled the dice,
with the numbers our birthdays –
partners in that unlucky lottery.
When it landed I was the lucky one,
but for him it meant the army.
Some years later I met him again
while drinking in the same pub,
and I thought we might catch up
the years lost in between,
but then I saw his eyes –
and what they’d seen.
© D G Moody 2024
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Comments
Just a few lines expressive
Just a few lines expressive of the trouble of war. There is so much war around the world, and much we rarely hear about.
When we were growing up our father couldn't really talk about the war (WW2) with us, though he got frustrated at some of the war films (fictional) and felt they glossed over so much. After he died I read a letter he'd written on his way back from the war (Indai at that point) to his fiancee (my mother). It was very touching because I was hearing him as a young man of my own age, but of course, he probably still missed out much of even his own experiences. Rhiannon
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I think you've caught the
I think you've caught the difference between then and now. Them and us.
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discharge
I was in the infantry after nine days was discharged on grounds of insanity. Had the whole show- gun overalls lots of stuff belt waterbottel belt boots namit, kruszcheff hair cut hundreds inoculations (probably the one thing worthwile). Food wasn't so good but enough.
Was I glad about being rejected! I'd seen enough not your hero tipe not me. The one guy that was sent home with me called me King david all the time hahaha! I even got paid R7.50 or something.
They sent my leftenant into the bushes with an ammobox fot PT he was very tired when coming back it was either because we lied around on the grass or that a rifle was stolen from our bungalo. Pity. Nice guy.
Thanks for a trip down memory lane Dougie! Tom
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heroes
My father's mother's maiden name was Keyes, in turn her mom was King, David was an uncle and his brother Dick King (not for his anatomy) was a folkhero for a marathon horserace. Long story, much like Paul Revere.
David was a hero in his own right people always find this amusing. A legend in the Boer War fought on the Boer's side together with the Irish.
What that has to do with the army don't ask me. They had intelligence check up in me with the struggle and that you might say I was a bit fearless outspoken. Isn't it funny how memories fade? Then you were a traitor and a terrorist, now you're a great hero.
Tom Brown
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