He Was My Sun
By loquaciousicity
- 4704 reads
He was my sun, my one and only son,
attired as a cowboy for the day.
And so I handed him a little gun
of fastened random sticks, for him to shoot and play.
Attired as a cowboy for the day
he searched for foes (with bows and arrows made
of fastened random sticks for them) to shoot, and play
the part of ‘Injuns’ in a mock charade.
He searched for foes (with bows and arrows made)
well written in his story books before he left for school.
The parts of ‘Injuns’ in a mock charade
were tainted with a crimson war paint, oh so cruel.
Well writ in history books before he left from school,
the tales (retold of victories that we’d won)
were tainted with a crimson war paint, oh so cruel.
The flow of paint was not to staunch when once begun.
From tales retold of victories that we’d won,
he learned to fight for God and country glory, though
the flow of pain, ’twas not to staunch when once begun
and bane to both sides (as he’d later come to know).
He learned to fight for God and country glory, though
the wounds of war were kept unseen (while nigh)
and bane to both sides (as we’d later come to know);
but still he stuffed a duffel bag with several things of youth, then said goodbye.
The wounds of war were kept unseen. While nigh,
the hours boomed, the clock struck 12 at last, his time to leave.
But, still, he stuffed a duffel bag with several things of youth, then said goodbye
to those who’d stay and even those who wouldn’t grieve.
The hours boomed, the clock struck 12 - alas, his time to leave.
They sent back body bags they’d stuffed with severed things of those who’d died
to those who’d stayed. And even those who wouldn’t grieve
with tears were stiff and masked like wooden boxes meant to hide.
They sent back body bags they’d stuffed with severed things of those who’d died;
his boots hung loose, one camouflaged in mud.
With tears, the stiff were masked in wooden boxes meant to hide
our children from the spilling of their blood.
His boots hung loose, one camouflaged in mud;
they said they’d needed him to help defend
our children from the spilling of their blood.
But can they ever see or really comprehend?
They said they’d needed him to help defend,
and so they handed him a little gun.
But can they ever see or really comprehend?
He was my sun, my one and only son.
Photograph by Scorpions and Centaurs
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Comments
Terry, I rarely swoon over
Terry, I rarely swoon over poetry, But this is fantastic. By fr the best poem that I've read on here probably this year. I could break it down line by line and say lots of good things about it, but sufice to say, I thought this was amazing.
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Gave me a chill. Fantastic,
Gave me a chill. Fantastic, is right. Needed to read it again.
Rich
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What a moving arc. From fuzzy
What a moving arc. From fuzzy nostalgia with a hint of sadness to the grim realities. Brilliantly written.
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Such a mixture of personal
Such a mixture of personal loss, memories and grief, and the messiness of realising wars are sometimes necessary but with with everyone's mixed up human failings become such messy things with distorted motives and wrong hatreds stirred.
And as usual tightly and carefully constructed verse. Rhiannon
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Absolutely brilliant poetry
Absolutely brilliant poetry written by a loving father.
You can hear the sadness in the poem through the specific lexicon you have chosen, and even the euphamisms used with certain words- i.e. 'little gun' is intended to paint the casualties of war as the victims that they truly were. For someone who has never experienced such a loss through war (being of a younger generation), I can only imagine the existence of complete loneliness that summised the years following this 'glorified' war.
In summary, a fantasticly written poem that is almost perfectly comprehensible in its sadness. I truly hope that others also appreciate its magnificience :)
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This is our Facebook and
This is our Facebook and Twitter pick of the day!
Get a fantastic reading recommendation every day.
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This is brilliant - the irony
This is brilliant - the irony is well worded. Is this a performance piece - it reads a little like a rap. Did you perform it?
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