I have a bad feeling about the
events of the past week. The Kleptocrat’s son-in-law (known around the Web as
the Secretary of Everything) toured military installations in Iraq in Ray-Ban®
Wayfarers and a Kevlar vest over his navy blazer, and the Kleptocrat himself
learned that if he wants to raise his abysmal approval ratings, all he has to
do is fire off a few Tomahawk missiles at an empty “enemy” air base.
After all, it won’t be his
sons and son-in-law who’ll get any closer to shots being fired than a canned
big-game “hunt” or a photo op. Nor will the children of those lickspittle
Repugnants in Congress be in harm’s way. No—it’ll be other people’s babies
doing that clean-up work.
Well, on the hundredth
anniversary of the Battle
of Vimy Ridge, I think revisiting the poetry of World War I is in order. Siegfried
Sassoon is one of the pre-eminent British war poets—an enthusiastic
volunteer in 1914 who came to view war in general, and this one in particular,
as an appalling venture. And he spoke out about it. It was only his family’s prominent
position in society and his own valorous war record that saved him from court
martial.
“Suicide in the Trenches” was written
in 1917, published a year later. It reminds me a lot of the ways Vietnam changed
boys I knew in school, and how the various Middle East adventures over the past
25 years have affected the men and women who put on body armor for a reason,
not a photo op, and faced sand and scorpions instead of mud and lice in support
of national policy.
It also reminds me of cummings’
“next to god of course america”.
“Suicide in the Trenches”
I knew a simple soldier boy
Who grinned at life in empty
joy,
Slept soundly through the
lonesome dark,
And whistled early with the
lark.
In winter trenches, cowed and
glum,
With crumps and lice and lack
of rum,
He put a bullet through his
brain.
No one spoke of him again.
You smug-faced crowds with
kindling eye
Who cheer when soldier lads
march by,
Sneak home and pray you'll
never know
The hell where youth and laughter
go.
I wish to God someone in the
White House would pick up a book of poetry—or a history book—and read it.
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