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Never Born To Fight

They needed fighting men, but they took her boy away.

With God's love and care, he may return safely one day.

He found Army life so lonely, he found it very strange.

He found himself ‘fighting’ straw men all day on the range.

 
Lost, lonely and afraid bayoneting dummies in the sun

He never felt at ease, never got the feel of a soldier’s gun?

Sent away to see action, the horror of the battle ground.

Nothing could prepare him for that, the carnage all around.

 
He now faced real men, not those fake soldiers of straw.

A bayonet that flashed through smoke, he never even saw.

Beside his unfired gun, he fell into a field of bodies and mud.

Another senseless loss of live, another hero who shed blood.


The last of his many letters had just reached his family home.

With no more letters to follow, their worry and fear had grown.

That fear was realised when the news broke late one night.

Their boy had gone forever, a young boy never born to fight


And now on Flanders Fields where all the red poppies mass.

The world will remember every young life that came to pass.

Generations have honoured the heroes, tears fallen river deep.

The poppies serve to remind us, in the wind they gently sweep.

◄ The Fox

Be Home For Christmas ►

Comments

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keith jeffries

Fri 9th Nov 2018 20:03

Mike this beautifully crafted poem speaks of man´s innate unsuitability for war. Men taken from farms, offices and workshops to a foreign land to be embroiled in a living hell is almost incomprehensible; cruel beyond belief.

You have captured this dilema perfectly. I applaud you
Thank you

Keith

<Deleted User> (18118)

Fri 9th Nov 2018 19:50

The tragedy faithfully expressed.
Very moving.
A poem to remember.

Hannah

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Douglas MacGowan

Fri 9th Nov 2018 19:11

Poignant and clear poem about the senselessness of many wars through time. I also liked the reference to the famous Flanders Field poem.

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