(Pictures by Dave McKean from The Wolves in the Walls by Neil Gaiman)

Sunday, April 23, 2006

lest we forget

A poem for Anzac Day.

Anzac Cove

There’s a lonely stretch of hillocks:
There’s a beach asleep and drear:
There’s a battered broken fort beside the sea.
There are sunken trampled graves:
And a little rotting pier:
And winding paths that wind unceasingly.
There’s a torn and silent valley:
There’s a tiny rivulet
With some blood upon the stones beside its mouth.
There are lines of buried bones:
There’s an unpaid waiting debt :
There’s a sound of gentle sobbing in the South.

-Leon Gellert

1 Comments:

At 9:59 PM, Blogger kermitthefrog said...

I knew Anzac Day before today as a funny name on the calendar, but I looked on the website you linked to. It's interesting -- like Memorial Day in the U.S., the government seems to bill it as a celebration of the bravery and loyalty of its soldiers. I would love to see a government set up a day to mourn the dead of war *and* the fact that there are wars in the first place.

 

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