Poems ✍️

  22.10.2025
  26


Author: Veterans Day

Veterans of the Seventies



 




By Marvin Bell








His army jacket bore the white rectangle   

of one who has torn off his name.  He sat mute   

at the round table where the trip-wire veterans   

ate breakfast.  They were foxhole buddies   

who went stateside without leaving the war.   

They had the look of men who held their breath   

and now their tongues.  What is to say

beyond that said by the fathers who bent lower   

and lower as the war went on, spines curving   

toward the ground on which sons sat sandbagged   

with ammo belts enough to make fine lace   

of enemy flesh and blood.  Now these who survived,   

who got back in cargo planes emptied at the front,

lived hiddenly in the woods behind fence wires   

strung through tin cans.  Better an alarm   

than the constant nightmare of something moving   

on its belly to make your skin crawl   

with the sensory memory of foxhole living.








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