What more can be said of war?

By guest writer Anthony J. Marsella

WAR

What more can be said of war

That has not already been said,

That has not already been written,

That has not already been sung in song,

Recited in verse, shared in epic tales?

 

What more can be said of war

That has not already been committed to screen

In iconic movies with legendary actors,

Fighting and dying with glory amidst waving flags,

Or in heralded documentaries carefully

Edited with photos, letters, poignant

Words of lament spoken amid haunting tunes?

 

What more can be said of war

That has not already been sculpted in marble,

Painted on canvases,

Photographed in back and white,

And vivid color,

Revealing blood is red, bone is white,

Death is endless.

What more can be said of war

That has not already been inscribed in minds and bodies

Of soldiers who survived,

Civilians who endured,

Prisoners captive to trauma,

Scars visible and invisible?

 

What more can be said of war

That has not already been carved

On ordered granite gravestones

In national cemeteries, honoring sacrifice,

Their death veiled in shade and sunlight?

 

What more can be said of war,

That has not already been said about heroes and villains,

Soldiers and generals,

Warriors and misfits,

Freedom fighters and terrorists,

Victims and collateral damage,

Apologies and reparations?

 

What more can be said of war,

That has not already been said about

Glorious and evil causes,

Lusts for power and control

Access to wealth and resources,

Messianic responsibilities, moral duties,

Domination . . . ascendancy . . . revenge?

 

What more can be said of war,

That has not already been eulogized

On fields of battle,

Where lives were lost, minds seared,

And historians’ crafts polished

With the biased narratives of victors:

Waterloo, Hue, Fallujah?

There is no winner in war!

 

And why, if so much has been

Spoken, written, and engraved,

Why do the lessons of war,

Continue to be ignored, denied, distorted?

And now . . .  Syria.

Comment:  I wrote this poem in the course of two days as I witnessed the tragedy of death and suffering in Syria, bewildered again and again, by the endless uses of so many death technologies. I was dismayed that a score of nations appear to be pursuing selfish interests amidst the ethnic and tribal cleansing and genocides occurring. We are living with endless war.  Nothing more can be said about war. Violence begets violence, war begets war! No cries of noble responsibilities to protect and defend from either side are sufficient or warranted. They are merely part of the tactics, strategies, and policies that sustain war. Who benefits from war?

Anthony J. Marsella, August 28-29, 2013