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The man across the waters
He ran, and ran, and ran
In total darkness, he fled
With no strategy, no plan
Not an inkling of what will lie ahead
He wanted to keep running
Never turning to look back
The sins he tried to bury kept coming
So depictive, so vivid...
He’d told himself to forget
After all, he’d been a patriot, serving his country to his best
He was loyal, skillful,
His superiors were impressed
Yet deep within, came a wave of bitter, never-ending regret
In some cases, he defended the hopeless
In others, he’d hoped to kill the defenseless
It was all so confusing, something he’d never quite figured out
If only he’d somehow found an alternative route
He dug his hands deep into his hair
And crumpled unto the ground, so lifeless and bare
After all these years…
He still couldn’t hold back his tears
He tried to cover his ears
To block out the blood-curdling screams
The ones that haunted him every night in his dreams
But they echoed only louder
He tried to close his eyes
But even then, he saw splotches of red
The innocent blood his cruel sins had shed
This unfortunate tale of misery was bound to never end
As he walked, he came by a babbling brook.
Sun-kissed, dreamy, yet far from still.
He longed to be shrouded by a blanket of its luscious waves,
Alas! It was his final will.
As he bent down to take his last breath
Surrendering finally, to the merciless fangs of death
He saw a familiar man staring right back at him
From across the glistening waters of the placid stream
This was a rather fine young man
With ash brown hair and complementing blue eyes
His cheeks were dimpled, skin, glossy and tan
He wore a friendly smile and was bulky in size
He was staring at his 30-year-old self
The daring youth he had once been
Optimistic. afraid of nothing
Ready to shake the world by the throat
Ready to be someone the world had never seen
Then the war came and turned his heart ice-cold.
Took everything away from him, put his dreams on hold.
His fiery passions were watered
Hopes and ambitions, slaughtered
Now, not even yet at 60, he was a living dead
Those that saw him, got the hint and fled
His clothes were dusty, fingers chewed and knotty
His eyes were jaded and filled with sorrow,
Gone was every bit of hope for tomorrow
He looked at the young man once again
His eyes glistened with tears, he finally understood
This man had enlisted because he wanted to
He had felt proud at the prospect of fighting for his country
He didn’t have to feel guilty, he didn’t want anyone’s pity
Someone had to sacrifice,
Someone had to be at the battlefront and pay the price
It was okay to cry, ok to miss those that died
But, the healing process will soon begin
Emotional scars will fade, prayers will be made
Hope will bubble within again
He remembered the most intense moments at the battlefront.
Though painful, he was grateful.
What an honour it was to serve the country he loved.
As he pondered these things, there was not a hint of regret.
He wasn't ready to die anymore, at least not yet.
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In my poem “the man from across the waters”, I placed myself in the shoes of a retired soldier. I saw the world through his eyes. I felt his pain of being misunderstood, I sensed his burden of immense guilt. Through the course of constructing this poem, I learnt that “The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.” G.K. Chesterton.