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Showing posts with label remembrance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label remembrance. Show all posts

Sunday, November 09, 2008

We remember them



Therefore is the name of it called Babel

And still we stood and stared far down
Into that ember-glowing town
Which every shaft and shock of fate
Had shorn into its base. Too late
Came carelessly Serenity.

Now torn and broken houses gaze
On the rat-infested maze
That once sent up rose-silver haze
To mingle through eternity.

The outlines, once so strongly wrought,
Of city walls, are now a thought
Or jest unto the dead who fought…
Foundation for futurity.

The shimmering sands where once there played
Children with painted pail and spade
Are drearly desolate, - afraid
To meet Night's dark humanity,

Whose silver cool remakes the dead,
And lays no blame on any head
For all the havoc, fire, and lead,
That fell upon us suddenly.

When all we came to know as good
Gave ways to Evil's fiery flood,
And monstrous myths of iron and blood
Seem to obscure God's clarity.

Deep sunk in sin, this tragic star
Sinks deeper still, and wages war
Against itself; strewn all the seas
With victims of a world disease.
- And we are left to drink the lees
Of Babel's direful prophecy.
Osbert Sitwell, January 1916

Fellow bloggers have marked this Remembrance Sunday with other poems and novels: on 60 going on 16, D has chosen Wilfred Owen's Anthem for Doomed Youth; Brit has linked to Siegfried Sassoon's Everyone sang on Thought Experiments; over on Read Warbler you will find Cath's review of All Quiet on the Western Front and on Bread and Roses, you will find another Wilfred Owen poem: Dulce et decorum est.