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Our Soldiers (Free verse) by Lenore
Their lifeâs the warâs. By following any street
Your feet will find the sand at their end.
Barbed wires serve for fences. The land is shaken
Like a dune by all the bombs that waken,
Blinding from sky to eye. Thereâs a calm seat
Where Generals sit who fight the war no more-
Aged, but hard and stony to the core,
To whom the battle was a trusted friend.
About the long-lived, huddled Army-camp
Their talk assumes the shifting sandâs undertone ;
Their motions go like gradual grains blown down,
And each soldier stands on the desert alone.
Even when they group in waiting idleness
The warâs pain stays about them ; they confess
In every mood they are the battleâs own.
Their tanks who tread the street go mean and neat
Like lips whose words and wails, complete ;
Their loves, too, serve the wars who stay at home
While their soldiers iron vessels roar and roam.
Every longing hearts a tank, and they, its crew-
Their lifeâs the warâs ; sometimes their death is, too!
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