Tuesday, January 28, 2025

A Corporal Who Would Never Be a Sergeant - poem

  

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

Dispatches for the Colonial Office

 

A Corporal Who Would Never Be a Sergeant

 

He was a corporal who would never be a sergeant

In a Palmach squad that would never be recognized

By the Palmach or by the Haganah.

He was a rabbi of the rocks and rubble and roads

 

He would never be recognized as a rabbi

He loved a curly-haired girl who would never marry him

And was friends with a little feral dog

Who crept out to him from behind the ruins

 

There was blood that called to him from Poland

In Yiddish and Hebrew; he didn’t remember why

He was a luftmensch, but dependable in his way

A littleness never admitted to staff meetings

 

He did what he was told to do, and then ignored

He delivered messages and curious packages

To obscure points forbidden to him and his kind

And the dog was shot dead for someone’s sport

 

With an old British rifle he cleared strongpoints

So that the officers could add to their resumes’

And he was told by the cooks that he was too late

As they laughed and closed the door on him

 

Confusion and smoke, and fighting in the streets

Burning corpses and armored cars, wild screams

There was little of him after the RPG hit

And children scurried out to mutilate and steal

 

He was posted as missing, possibly a deserter

No comments: