Unknown Soldier by Katherine Gallagher

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We have covered him with real flowers
and taken him from country to country.

It’s always the same journey –
people standing in the streets
silently saluting
as we carry him by.

And our hands tremble
under his weight,
our eyes are shocked
by the riddle of tongues
presenting the same paradox
in every country –

the whole human voice as background
shrilled to fever
about keeping the guns at bay.

In response to November prompt Remembrance Day

1942 by Katherine Gallagher

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They’d hoped he’d be back for Christmas –
the lights shining down on him, the tree
somehow shielding off the horror. A break.
The family hadn’t seen him as a soldier,
in his uniform, among harvested paddocks,
the dried stubble that pricked your legs.


Arriving home, he said Merry Christmas,
hugged people and slapped them on the back.
Wandered about the place, eyes crinkled
with strain, lines dug
into his forehead. So young, he seemed
to be either laughing or very sad
as though, in between,
there was nothing.

In response to November prompt Remembrance Day.