Mel Witherden's Web Site



Where Power Lies

2. War and Piss

 

In My Name 1: Dragonflies

Young brothers are swatting dragonflies

down by the Euphrates to avoid being stung.

Monstrous complex all-seeing eyes

follow their play; the drones hold still

in mid-air on green translucent wings;

like no known missile, the things dart

with terrifying speed and uncanny aim.

The boys know they are certain to be killed.

 

A father enters a room from a bombed-out street.

Terrified, he shoots point-blank a man there;

and covers the body with a black plastic sheet,

exempting him from its spent dead-eyed stare

and dread of revenge. He’s a former chef

who trained for murder with invading forces

when café bombs changed his life mid-course.

He doesn’t know who’s issuing the orders,

why his leaders need internal borders,

why they dilute authority with slogans

ditch diplomacy for paranoia

or mix up reality with nightmare.

No one can say how long his job will run.

 

The father retires exhausted from battle;

he returns in tears to his children

who have escaped the drones

and are now hiding under blankets from scenes

of repetitious TV cartoon violence

where offenders are hammered literally

into the ground to come out misshapen

and yet miraculously viable.

All their father has hoped for

is that the state will protect them,

and the Ministry of War provides plausibility –

a spokesman to disseminate news of freedom

and pre-emptive and inventive self-defence.

   

Down by the marshes near the river’s edge

awful larvae climb the reeds and shed their skins.

Within hours the dragonflies will have mated

in emphatic and erratic stingless flight

and laid eggs in backwaters of the war.

In time new monsters will be poised to fly.

 

In My Name 2: Freedom

A soldier, one of ours, enters a room

shoots the cringing man sitting alone.

Offscreen, his colleagues join the hum,

give a nod as the headcam zooms in

on the blood and bedclothes strewn

with the body in the evening gloom.

His lieutenant later tells the platoon

as the shaky video is shown,

 “These scum are the reason we’ve come.

 Thank god we can bring them freedom.”

  

In My Name 3: Glory

Old generals in TV studios wear

regimental ties, have three minutes air

to pack the war away like lead soldiers

boxed in cardboard and instant nostalgia.

The commentary by historians heats

the debate, like a gardener who repeats

hand-me-down wisdom from musty old men.

Facts, they claim, were less reliable when

knowledge was thin and prejudice was deep,

and journalists were known expenses cheats.

 

Now smart newsmen arrived at the war dressed

in flak jackets designed to withstand the best

propaganda, ready to slake their thirst

for reputation putting down the first

gun-deaf bomb-numb rough-drafted history.

By night they’d booze on neat hyperbole,

yet, for all the crap they spoke, body matter

they pissed and shat, or later found splattered

and dried on their beards, they were targets too,

in dreadful danger from collateral truth.

They’d a perfect view in the press hotel

when a friendly tank slipped one well-aimed shell

down the dead photographer’s camera lens

in case someone asked if our war made sense.

 

In my name 4: Honour

Again a soldier enters a room

shoots an unarmed man in his home.

“I could see him going for his gun.

You saw the same?” he tells his chums.

They agree it’s a job well done,

and one more stinking Haji gone,

In time the night patrol moves on

down the lethal street to comb

for more insurgents in their zone.

They’re our heroes, every one,

fighting an enemy barely known

indiscriminate as stones

that local kids have thrown,

or the honours that will come

in the war that darkness won. 

 

In My Name 5: History

I’ve seen Salamis, Antioch, Sicilia,

I’ve dived at the Hellespont, whored by the Pillars

Dined with Dionysius and played dice with Zeus,

Baited bears in the Lebanon, taken teeth from Jews.

Yet I can’t count the throats I slit, bellies disembowelled,

the bridges burned, the temples, battlefields we fouled,

I couldn’t name one girl we took, enflamed by her screams,

any city that we sacked, or child we wrenched from dreams.

I can’t recall the face of any friend who fell

beside me then, or whether I had known them well.

You’ll never hear my name, and I can’t give you dates.

But war is what I made. And history, and states. 

 

A man enters an auditorium

his rucksack is the bomb.

 

3. Offence and Consequence »