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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 12:17 pm

Diogonese
(Die-odg-o-knees)

Diogonese always worked,
A Soldier, a Sailor, an Airman,
For Queen and Country.
One day tossed aside,
A wound, Mental? Physical?
Pensioned off, sacked.
Down scaling.

He knows no other life,
Guided, pushed and driven.
Only now, loneliness darkens,
around him.
The Politicians have finished,
Cheque mate, pawns discarded.
Just give him his dog and rope,
Stick and bag.

Let him tramp the streets,
Embalmed in the thoughts,
Of who he is,
Was,
Or might be?

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 12:20 pm

This is based on the D Day Dodgers a song and parody of Lily Marlene from the last World War about the invasions in Italy.



The Iraq Dodgers (Sing to Lily Marlene)

We’re the Iraq Dodgers
Out in Afghani,
Always on the Vino
Always on a spree,
Is that what you all do think of us?
A holiday, without a fuss,
Cos we’re the Iraq Dodgers out in Afghani.

Mr Blair you sent our boys
Out on combat tour,
Half the boys you sent,
Don’t know what, they’re fighting for,
Then bullets fly right over head,
There’s some alive and some boys dead,
We’re Artful Iraq Dodgers, In sunny Afghani.

The food is crap, just like the digs,
Why are we all here?
We’d rather be at home,
In Blighty with warm beer,
But no instead we’re here on tour,
We’re fighting a forgotten war,
We’re flamin Iraq Dodgers, in flamin Afghani.

We fight a war we did not choose,
The terms we did not make,
We’re now page twelve in last weeks’ news,
Oh for heavens sake,
When will this war decide to end?
It’s driving us around the bend,
We’re traumatised old Dodgers in dear old Afghani.

We’ve been hear o’er five years
And we didn’t catch Saddam,
That was left to those
In the Country near Iran,
We’re in a Country far away,
It’s good to see, but not to stay,
We’re long forgotten Dodgers in barren Afghani.

So when the time arrives
And it’s time to go on leave,
We look at one another
And what did we achieve?
Then on the transport fly back home,
With wife and kids, we’re free to roam,
We’re lucky Iraq Dodgers from war torn Afghani.

The leave is up, we must go back,
To our daily job,
Fighting for World Peace,
Only earning half a bob,
Then on a plane out to Baghdad,
Its war again we feel quite sad,
We’re not so Iraq Dodgers,

We’re not in Afghani

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 12:22 pm

Lacking

The attack went in,
Taliban Stronghold.
Tracer flew,
Like swarms of fire trailing Hornets,
Buzzing, Zipping,
Stinging.

“Re- group”, a withdrawal called.
Head Count.
One Missing.
“Who saw him last?” A decision,
Made from camaraderie, not monetary gain.

Brave men, strapped to the wings
Of a Warrior War Bird,
Searching for the lost one.
They swoop, this Heroic flock
And raise their fallen Brother.

Actions of true friends and comrades
Over come the instinct of
Self preservation and fear.
The Adversity thrown at them, flung aside.
For the sake of a man,
And his Family

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 12:23 pm

‘Of Course’

Are the Military under strength?
‘Of Course’
Are the Military under equipped?
‘Of Course’
Are the Military fighting wars for no reason?
‘Of Course’
Are you blinkered?
‘Of Course’
Eyes closed?
‘Of Course’
Being subdued? In your place?
‘Of Course’

“Of Course, Of Course
My Kingdom
For
Of Course.”

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 12:25 pm

Recruitment

In a time of war, as we are starting to know,
We see more adverts that appear on show,

To call up brave men and send them away,
A hope they come back, not be burried where they stay.

But in the present day, in wars not of our choosing,
The Recruiters are really struggling in a battle they’re loosing.

In days of old and years gone by, if men were not too willing,
The ‘Press Gangs’ used to get them drunk and accept the old King’s Shilling.

Is this what’s going to happen, when the services get too short,
To conscript our men, just like Vietnam and send to a Foreign port?

Once they’ve been conscripted and sent to a hostile shore,
Like Basra or Helmand to fight someone else’s war.

What is going to happen, have you stopped and thought,
To all our brave Servicemen on return to a British Port?

They leave the Service that they served, so strong and oh so loyal,
With a handshake and a screwed up mind, for all their years of toil.

So now you need to look, at all the reasons why,
The Services can’t recruit and the source is running dry,

Because young men who cannot see, a World without its cares,
Will end up in an institute, with problems no one shares.

For when the Government shouts, “Conscript,” because they’re in a fret,
Open your eyes and remember,
An Offensive planned for Tet.

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 12:28 pm

Soldier Soul

“Purvey me your soul”,
The Devil Cried,
To a war torn and down trodden Warrior,
“We’ll descend through the Earth,
An insidious place,
Much deeper than any old Collier”.

Looked up from the ground,
The young Soldier did,
Looked him firm and square in the eye,
“I’ve done no wrong,
Just done as I’m told
And I’ll not visit you and fry”.

The Devil looked back,
A pervasive glance,
Said, “You’ll come with me it’s your time”.
“We’ll plunge to the core,
To my sizzling lounge
And there you’ll pay for your crime”.

A cool, subtle retort,
Came from the young man,
“I’m not the reason you came”.
“In a place just like this,
Ubiquitous, you are
And you’re looking for someone to blame”.

“Blame?” He replied,
“No not on your life,
I’m looking for someone to praise”.
“He’s an equal to me,
As black as can be,

“Whoever he is,
He‘s done a good job,
Of embroiling himself in this war”.
“With reasons that are,
So way above me,
So why? Even I’m not sure”.

The Soldier rang back,
“No neither am I,
I was sent here, my job is to fight,
I do as I’m told,
Day in and Day out,
I don’t reason what’s wrong and what’s right”.

“Well you’re not the one,
I’m looking for”,
The riposte made the Soldier relax,
“There are much bigger fish,
Out there to get snagged,
In the boiling pot, now that’s Iraq”.

“So what is your name?”
The Devil asked boy,
“It’s George, I’m a Patron Saint,
“And the reason I’m here,
Is to defend against you,
The Soldiers whose names that you taint”.

The Devil’s jaw dropped,
An exchange then ensued,
A Battle of Pure Good ‘gainst Pure Evil.
With no weapons drawn,
Just colloquy and chat,
Between George and a fed up old Devil.

When they came to the end,
A decision was made,
About who would make Hell’s extradition.
Not the Soldiers at all,
Though they fight and they fall,
It must be, A War Monger,
Politician.

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 2:21 pm

Some great poems in here. If you are interested in poems/poetry and in helping people (especially forces or ex forces), have a look at our sites at www.ForcesPoetry.com and www.ForcesStories.com. We publish all stories and poems you send in and are written by you, (as long as they are not racist etc).

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2009 7:11 pm

My Nan passed away in October 2008 and my Grandfather in October 2006. He was a member of the Royal Norfolk Regiment.
Whilst sorting out some of their photos and momentos, I came across this poem written on the back of an old photo dated 17 July 1913.

A Childs Prayer for a Father

God bless and keep my Daddy safe
Wherever he may be
And when this dreadful war is over
Please bring him back to me.

God bless all soldier Daddies
Who have little mites like me
And if they cannot all come home
Please take them home to Thee.

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 7:29 pm

Cracking poem 1200max, short but very sweet.

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Wed Jan 28, 2009 12:29 am

schweik:
And then there is this excellent WW1 poem by Gilbert Frankau:

HOW RIFLEMAN BROWN CAME TO VALHALLA


To the lower Hall of Valhalla, to the heroes of no renown,
Relieved from his spell at the listening-post, came Rifleman Joseph Brown.
With never a rent in his khaki nor smear of blood on his face,
He flung his pack from his shoulders, and made for an empty place.

The Killer-men of Valhalla looked up from the banquet-board
At the unfouled breech of his rifle, at the unfleshed point of his sword;
And the unsung dead of the trenches, the kings who have never a crown,
Demanded his pass to Valhalla from Rifleman Joseph Brown.

"Who comes, unhit, to the party?" A one-legged Corporal spoke,
And the gashed heads nodded approval through the rings of the Endless Smoke:
"Who comes for the beer and the Woodbines of the never-closed Canteen,
With the barrack-shine on his bayonet and a full-charged magazine?"

Then Rifleman Brown looked round him at the nameless men of the Line -
At the wounds of the shell and the bullet, at the burns of the bomb and mine;
At the tunics, virgin of medals but crimson-clotted with blood,
At the ankle boots and the puttees, caked stiff with the Flanders mud;
At the myriad short Lee-Enfields that crowded the rifle-rack,
Each with its blade to the sword-boss brown, and its muzzle powder-black:

And Rifleman Brown said never a word; yet he felt in the soul of his soul
His right to the beer of the lower Hall, though he came to drink of it, whole;
His right to the fags of the free Canteen, to a seat at the banquet-board,
Though he came to the men who had killed their man, with never a man to his sword.

"Who speaks for the stranger Rifleman, O boys of the free Canteen?
Who passes the chap with the unmaimed limbs and the kit that is far too clean?"
The gashed heads eyed him above their beers, the gashed lips sucked at their smoke:
There were three at the board of his own platoon, but not a man of them spoke.

His mouth was made for the tankard froth and the biting whiff of a fag,
But he knew that he might not speak for himself to the dead men who do not brag.
A gun-butt crashed on the gateway, a man came staggering in;
His head was cleft with a great red wound from the temple-bone to the chin,
His blade was dyed to the bayonet-boss with the clots that were scarcely dry;
And he cried to the men who had killed their man:
"Who passes the Rifleman? I!
By the four I slew, by the shell I stopped, if my feet be not too late,
I speak the word for Rifleman Brown that a chap may speak for his mate."

The dead of lower Valhalla, the heroes of dumb renown,
They pricked their ears to a tale of the earth as they set their tankards down.



"My mate was on sentry this evening when the General happened along
And asked what he'd do in a gas-attack,. Joe told him:
'Beat the gong.'
'What else?'
'Open fire, Sir,' Joe answered.
'Good God, man,' our General said,
'By the time you'd beaten that bloodstained gong the chances are you'd be dead.
Just think, lad.' 'Gas helmet, of course, Sir.' 'Yes, damn it, and gas helmet first.'
So Joe stood dumb to attention, and wondered why he'd been cursed."

The gashed heads turned to the Rifleman, and now it seemed that they knew
Why the face that had never a smear of blood was stained to the jawbones, blue.
"He was posted again at midnight." The scarred heads craned to the voice,
As the man with the blood-red bayonet spoke up for the mate of his choice.
"You know what it's like in a listening-post, the Very candles aflare,
Their bullets smacking the sand-bags, our Vickers combing your hair,
How your ears and your eyes get jumpy, till each known tuft that you scan
Moves and crawls in the shadows till you'd almost swear it was man;
You know how you peer and snuff at the night when the North-East gas-winds blow."
"By the One who made us and maimed us" quoth lower Valhalla "we know!"

"Sudden, out of the blackness, sudden as Hell, there came
Roar and rattle of rifles, spurts of machine-gun flame;
And Joe stood up in the forward sap to try and get on to the game.
Sudden, their shells come screaming; sudden, his nostrils sniff
The sickening reek of the rotten pears, the death that kills with a whiff.
Death! and he knows it certain, as he bangs on his cartridge-case,
With the gas-cloud's claws at his windpipe and the gas cloud's wings on his face . . .
We heard his gong in our dug-out, he only whacked on it twice,
We whipped our gas-bags over our heads, and manned the step in a trice -
For the cloud would have caught us as sure as Fate if he'd taken the Staff's advice."

His head was cleft with a great red wound from the chin to the temple-bone,
But his voice was clear as a sounding gong, "I'll be damned if I'll drink alone,
Not even in lower Valhalla! Is he free of your free Canteen,
My mate who comes with the unfleshed point and the full-charged magazine?"

The gashed heads rose at the Rifleman o'er the rings of the Endless Smoke,
And loud as the roar of a thousand guns Valhalla's answer broke,
And loud as the crash of a thousand shells their tankards clashed on the board:
"He is free of the mess of the Killer-men, your mate of the unfleshed sword;
For we know the worth of his deed on earth; as we know the speed of the death
Which catches its man by the back of the throat and gives him water for breath;
As we know how the hand at the helmet-cloth may tarry seconds too long,
When the very life of the front-line trench is staked on the beat of a gong.
By the four you slew, by the case he smote, by the gray gas-cloud and the green,
We pass your mate for the Endless Smoke and the beer of the free Canteen."

In the lower hall of Valhalla, with the heroes of no renown,
With our nameless dead of the Marne and the Aisne, of Mons, and of Wipers town,
With the men who killed ere they died for us, sits Rifleman Joseph Brown.
The best poem i have ever read is there any more of his works online i cant find any

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Wed Jan 28, 2009 10:58 am

Marvellous poem JDL.

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Wed Jan 28, 2009 11:38 am

for my a level english course work im looking at modern war poery and daries of soldiers and then turning them into poetry . When ive finnaly finished writting them im going to post them on here somewhere and id really appreciate your feed back much love to you all xox

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Wed Jan 28, 2009 1:03 pm

Crimbo - you have been busy. I particularly liked "Of Course".

Caz - wish you all the best with that course work. Sounds like an excellent project.

And now, because I am worse than useless at writing anything myself, over to Kate Bush:

B.f.p.o.*
Army dreamers.
Mammys hero.
B.f.p.o.
Mammys hero.

Our little army boy
Is coming home from b.f.p.o.
Ive a bunch of purple flowers
To decorate a mammys hero.

Mourning in the aerodrome,
The weather warmer, he is colder.
Four men in uniform
To carry home my little soldier.

What could he do?
Should have been a rock star.
But he didnt have the money for a guitar.
What could he do?
Should have been a politician.
But he never had a proper education.
What could he do?
Should have been a father.
But he never even made it to his twenties.
What a waste --
Army dreamers.
Ooh, what a waste of
Army dreamers.

Tears oer a tin box.
Oh, jesus christ, he wasnt to know,
Like a chicken with a fox,
He couldnt win the war with ego.

Give the kid the pick of pips,
And give him all your stripes and ribbons.
Now hes sitting in his hole,
He might as well have buttons and bows.

What could he do?
Should have been a rock star.
But he didnt have the money for a guitar.
What could he do?
Should have been a politician.
But he never had a proper education.
What could he do?
Should have been a father.
But he never even made it to his twenties.
What a waste --
Army dreamers.
Ooh, what a waste of
Army dreamers.
Ooh, what a waste of all that
Army dreamers,
Army dreamers,
Army dreamers, oh...

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Wed Jan 28, 2009 1:06 pm

joey_deacons_lad:
The best poem i have ever read is there any more of his works online i cant find any

They're difficult to find. Here are some more:

The Voice of the Guns


We are the guns, and your masters! Saw ye our flashes?
Heard ye the scream of our shells in the night, and the shuddering crashes?
Saw ye our work by the roadside, the shrouded things lying,
Moaning to God that He made them---the maimed and the dying?
Husbands and sons,
Fathers and lovers, we break them. We are the guns!

We are the guns and ye serve us. Dare ye grow weary,
Steadfast at night-time, at noon-time, or waking when dawn winds blow dreary
Across the reeds and the muds and the flats of the barrier-water,
To wait on the hour of our choosing, the minute decided for slaughter?
Swift, the clock runs...
Yea, to the ultimate second. Stand by your guns!

We are the guns, and we need you; here, in the timbered
Pits that are screened by the crest, and the copse where at dusk ye unlimbered;
Pits that one found us -- and, finding, gave life. (Did he flinch from the giving?)
Ere, with the sun's
Rising, the sorrowful spirit abandoned its guns.

Who but the guns shall avenge him? Battery-action!
Load us and lay to the centermost hair of the dial-sight's refraction
Set your quick hands to our levers to compass the sped soul's assoiling:
Brace your taught limbs to the shock when the thrust of the barrel recoiling
Deafens and stuns!
Vengeance is ours for our servants; trust ye the guns.

Least of our bond-slaves or greatest, grudge ye the burden?
Hard is the service of ours which has only our service for guerdon?
Grow the limbs lax, and unsteady the hands, which aforetime we trusted?
Dominate ones,
Are we not tried serfs and proven -- true to our guns?

Ye are the guns! Are we worthy? Shall not these speak for us
Out of the wood where the tree-trunks are slashed with the vain bolts that seek for us;
Thunder of batteries firing in unison, swish of shell flighting,
Hissing that rushes to silence and breaks to the thud of alighting;
Death that outruns
Horsemen and foot? Are we justified? Answer O guns!

Yea! By our works are ye justified -- toil unrelieved;
Manifold labours, co-ordinate each to the sending achieved;
Discipline, not of the feet but the soul, unremitting unfeigned;
Tortures unholy by flame and by maiming unknown, faced and distained;
Courage that shuns
Only foolhardiness; even by these are ye worthy your guns.

Wherefore -- and unto ye only power hath been given;
Yea! Beyond man, over men, over desolate cities and riven;
Yea! Beyond space, over earth and the seas and the sky's dominions;
Yea! Beyond time, over Hell and the fiends and the Death-Angel's pinions.
Vigilant ones,
Loose them, and shatter, and spare not. We are the Guns!


Headquarters

A league and a league from the trenches -- from the traversed maze of the lines,
Where daylong the sniper watches and daylong the bullet whines,
And the cratered earth is in travail with mines and with countermines --

Here, where haply some woman dreamed (are those her roses that bloom
In the garden beyond the windows of my littered working room?)
We have decked the map for our masters as a bride is decked for the groom.

Fair, on each lettered numbered square -- crossroad and mound and wire,
Loophole, redoubt, and emplacement -- lie the targets their mouths desire;
Gay with purples and browns and blues, have we traced them their arcs of fire.

And ever the type-keys chatter; and ever our keen wires bring
Word from the watchers a-crouch below, word from the watchers a-wing:
And ever we hear the distant growl of our hid guns thundering.

Hear it hardly, and turn again to our maps, where the trench lines crawl,
Red on the gray and each with a sign for the ranging shrapnel's fall --
Snakes that our masters shall scotch at down, as is written here on the wall.

For the weeks of our waiting draw to a close. . . . There is scarcely a leaf astir
In the garden beyond my windows, where the twilight shadows blur
The blaze of some woman's roses. . . . "Bombardment orders, sir."


The Deserter


‘I’m sorry I done it, Major.’
We bandaged the livid face;
And led him out, ere the wan sun rose,
To die his death of ignorance.

The bolt-heads locked to the cartridges;
The rifles stead to rest,
As cold stock nestled at colder cheek
And foresight lined on the breast.

‘Fire’ called the Sergeant-Major.
The muzzles flamed as he spoke:
And the shameless soul of a nameless man
Went up in cordite-smoke.

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 6:45 pm

In Barracks


The barrack-square, washed clean with rain,
Shines wet and wintry-grey and cold.
Young Fusiliers, strong-legged and bold,
March and wheel and march again.
The sun looks over the barrack gate,
Warm and white with glaring shine,
To watch the soldiers of the Line
That life has hired to fight with fate.

Fall out: the long parades are done.
Up comes the dark; down goes the sun.
The square is walled with windowed light.
Sleep well, you lusty Fusiliers;
Shut your brave eyes on sense and sight,
And banish from your dreamless ears
The bugle’s dying notes that say,
‘Another night; another day.’

Siegfried Sassoon

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 10:06 pm

A Helping Hand

Blinking faintly just a spot
a distant light or maybe not
Is it them come back for more
or is it mates in teams of four

I crawl a bit to hide my form
and nearer still the light comes on
Nearer yet to me it gets
I check my rifle prepare for threat

Then quietly a voice I hear
“come on son, have no fear”
A friendly voice thank god for that
I prepare to move from where I’m sat

The voice gets nearer almost here
I know I’m saved I lose my fear
I see a person just ahead
ready to move (my legs feel dead)

Now I see him now he’s here
his face I know but still I peer
“I came to get you don’t be scared
your job is done, you’ve been spared”

I take his hand my legs now work
I stand beside him and start to smirk
I see some others coming through
there’s old man Stan and Connor too

And as I walk with him a while
I see more mates and start to smile
But all these mates weren’t they dead?
Have I been injured lost my head?

How obvious it soon became
Mohamed, Allah, Christ (just names)
Standing there with all my squad
The hand I took was that of God

Mac Macdonald

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 12:01 am

A Soldier's Prayer

Look God: I have never spoken to You,
But now I want to say, "How do You do."
You see God, they told me You did not exist;
And, like a fool, I believed all of this.
Last night from a shell hole I saw Your sky;
I figured right then they had told me a lie.
Had I taken the time to see the things You made,
I would know they weren't calling a spade a spade.
I wonder, God, if You would shake my hand;
Somehow, I feel that You will understand.
Strange, I had to come to this hellish place
Before I had time to see Your face.
Well, I guess there isn't much more to say,
But I am sure glad, God, I met You today.
I guess the zero hour will soon be here,
But I am not afraid since I know You are near.
The signal - well, God, I will have to go;
I love you lots, this I want you to know.
Looks like this will be a horrible fight;
Who knows, I may come to your house tonight.
Though I wasn't friendly with you before,
I wonder, God, if you would wait at the door.
Look, I am crying, me shedding tears!
I wish I had known you these many years.
Well, I will have to go now, God.
Goodbye - Strange, since I met you,
I am not afraid to die.

...Author Unknown

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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 8:23 am

You and Him
Your alarm goes off, you hit the snooze and sleep for another 10 minutes.
He stays up for days on end.
You take a warm shower to help you wake up.
He goes days or weeks without running water.
You complain of a "headache", and call in sick.
He gets shot at as others are hit, and keeps moving forward.
You put on your 'Anti war/Don't support the troops' shirt, and go meet up with your friends.He still fights for your right to wear that shirt.
You make sure you're cell phone is in your pocket.
He clutches the cross hanging on his chain next to his dog tags.
You talk trash about your "buddies" that aren't with you.
He knows he may not see some of his buddies again.
You walk down the beach, staring at all the pretty girls.
He walks the streets, searching for insurgents and terrorists.
You complain about how hot it is.
He wears his heavy gear, not daring to take off his helmet to wipe his brow.
You go out to lunch, and complain because the restaurant got your order wrong.
He doesn't get to eat today.
Your maid makes your bed and washes your clothes.
He wears the same things for weeks, but makes sure his weapons are clean.
You go to the mall and get your hair redone.
He doesn't have time to brush his teeth today.
You're angry because your class ran 5 minutes over.
He's told he will be held over an extra 2 months.
You call your girlfriend and set a date for tonight.
He waits for the mail to see if there is a letter from home.
You hug and kiss your girlfriend, like you do everyday.
He holds his letter close and smells his love's perfume.
You roll your eyes as a baby cries.
He gets a letter with pictures of his new child, and wonders if they'll ever meet.
You criticize your government, and say that war never solves anything.
He sees the innocent tortured and killed by their own people and remembers why he is fighting.
You hear the jokes about the war, and make fun of men like him.
He hears the gunfire, bombs and screams of the wounded.
You see only what the media wants you to see.
He sees the broken bodies lying around him.
You are asked to go to the store by your parents. You don't.
He does exactly what he is told.
You stay at home and watch TV.
He takes whatever time he is given to call, write home, sleep, and eat.
You crawl into your soft bed, with down pillows, and get comfortable.
He crawls under a tank for shade and a 5 minute nap, only to be woken by gunfire.
You sit there and judge him, saying the world is probably a worse place because of men like him. If only there were more men like him!

Cazwantsasquaddie
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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 9:23 am

Dear Caz, Car bumper sticker.

If you can read this thank a teacher
If it's in English thank a soldier

tropper66
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Re: Poetry? Maybe it isn't all arty farty bull?

Post Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 1:43 am

The-Lord-Flasheart:
kaka:
dribble, dribble, copy, paste

Flashearts Prayer

Chubb is a cunt who has been know to lie
If she keeps posting, she will surely die


I WANT TO BE A PILOT

I’d love to be a pilot
I want to learn to fly
In a west land lynx helicopter
I’ll take up to the sky

I’ve dreamt had a gift ride
To A.A.C Training School I went
In an helicopter I soared up high
Then made a smooth descent

The pilot LFH wore his headset
Pilots gloves adorned each hand
A plotter marked out the headings
On the maps so we could land

I’ll have to get a logbook
A licence holder too
DVD’s, books and videos
To learn what I should do

Some pilots use a GPS
Have helmets on their heads
Wear special shirts and UNIFORM
Complete with epaulets

Aviator glasses are a flying must
And a watch would be a start
Ear defenders, licence holder
I’d really look the part

Yes, I’d love to be a pilot
I want to learn to fly
In west land lynx helicopter
I’ll take up to the sky


(Author Unknown )

kaka
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