Wars
By Edmund Janas
Wars should be so far off
the young soldiers grow exhausted
before ever reaching the fight.
I only know war
through my old man’s nightmares –
The hell he survived, then battled
alone for decades after,
before I could try to help him.
Close as ragged breaths
and raw, sleepless skin,
wars are never far off.
So when I hear out-of-shape, gray warriors
talk tough from armchairs and podiums,
I know they’d shatter first
under the brutal truth of combat.
War means mules overloaded, tumbling
down cliff sides. “Dear John” and “Dear Jane” letters
tear-stained on bloodsoaked grass.
Mile after mile of soul-sucking mud,
the unforgettable reek
of friend and foe.
It means screaming regrets, aimless,
into cold night air, night after night.
Not some blowhard’s call to action
as the politicians calling for it
licks chicken grease from their plates.
My Pop, who couldn’t hurt a fly,
was a machine-gunner on the front line.
How do you make sense of that?
He wanted me to see Italy
in all its peacetime beauty,
after he’d only known its warzones.
So I went, because he’d been to hell
and didn’t want me to join the tours.
That’s why, when I hear soft folks
talking tough on wars, I know
their kids aren’t shipping out
with the cannon fodder poor.
And those who clammor for invasions?
They’ll send our youth to die, not their own.
War is never clean, and never far away,
despite what drone-drunk leaders say.
Don’t glorify that graveyard march
unless you’ve carried the scars
or helped to shoulder the burdens
our veterans bring home.