Friday, August 07, 2009

Less passionate the long war throws
its burning thorn about all men,
caught in one grief, we share one wound,
and cry one dialect of pain.

We have forgot who fired the house
Whose easy mischief spilled first blood
Under one raging roof we lie
The fault no longer understood
But as our twisted arms embrace the desert where our cities stood
Death’s family likeness in each face must show at last our brotherhood.

~ The Long War by Laurie Lee

2 comments:

Ezanee said...

That is some dark shit, dude. Also quite compelling; war is always a game of mutual loss, no matter the justification or legitimization. Did you know that it's the 64th anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing? If anything, nuclear war and its related arms race can be related to this passage as well.

Anyway it's always nice to see you blogging again. I'm in my CAD class waiting for my lecturer to arrive. Getting pretty good at this shit!

Anonymous said...

Reading the poem, I'm reminded of this book, Animal Farm. Hope you'll like this

http://www.gutenberg.net.au/ebooks01/0100011h.html