http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
How often, I wonder do we really think about what we are saying or even mean what we say, bearing in mind that our choice of words may well leave us vulnerable to misinterpretation?
The world owes much to the men and women in its armed forces wherever they may be. Nor should we ever forget that we owe as much if not more to their families and friends (along with everyone else) who, time and time again, are called upon to pick up the pieces of life, love and hope whenever and wherever lives fall apart; a time of peace, for some if not most of us can be another kind of war.
“Never think that war, no matter how necessary, nor how justified, is not a crime.” - Ernest Hemingway
Yet, justify it, we invariably do if only by that old stand-by, rhetoric.
The world owes much to the men and women in its armed forces wherever they may be. Nor should we ever forget that we owe as much if not more to their families and friends (along with everyone else) who, time and time again, are called upon to pick up the pieces of life, love and hope whenever and wherever lives fall apart; a time of peace, for some if not most of us can be another kind of war.
“Never think that war, no matter how necessary, nor how justified, is not a crime.” - Ernest Hemingway
Yet, justify it, we invariably do if only by that old stand-by, rhetoric.
WAR TALK
What
do people mean when they talk about
the 'integrity' of war?
Is
it a comment on the neatness of body bags
laid
out in a line?
Or
maybe they are referring to injured people
rising
above despair?
Can
it be they mean the finer principles of war
have
been upheld?
(Doesn’t
everyone do their best to keep friendly
fire
incidents to a minimum?)
Maybe its generals court integrity for strategies
of
‘win some, lose some’?
Can
it be politicians promote their own integrity
to
win elections?
Maybe
it’s all about being polite, discreet, about
to
whom the spoils of war?
I
asked a soldier who lost an arm and a leg in Iraq,
but
he just shrugged
Maybe
(the soldier said) I should ask the orphans
and
widows…on both sides?
Lots
of questions and not nearly enough answers
or (any?) right ones
Poor humanity, ever caught in a cross-fire of words,
come worst of all worlds
Copyright R. N. Taber 2012; 2018
[Note: An earlier version of this poem appears under the title 'Next of Kin have been Informed, but should Refrain from Asking Questions' in Tracking the Torchbearer by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2012.]
Poor humanity, ever caught in a cross-fire of words,
come worst of all worlds
Copyright R. N. Taber 2012; 2018
[Note: An earlier version of this poem appears under the title 'Next of Kin have been Informed, but should Refrain from Asking Questions' in Tracking the Torchbearer by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2012.]
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