NP Rank:
Soldier Poet Blogs Before Overseas Deployment
I am a soldier on active duty with the Canadian Forces who just happens to be a published poet. Most of the troops I serve with don’t know that I even write. In this blog, I aim to post irregular updates on my progress towards getting my current poetry published, raising a family, and deploying overseas in a combat role. I welcome your input/replies.
I use the name/avatar/nom de plume ‘soldierpoet‘ as a means to provide me with some creative freedom IOT (that’s military speakism for ‘in order to’) write what I want in my poetry without having to worry about it affecting my career, not that I am overly concerned it would. I just haven’t figured out how to consolidate the two. Since I am starting out with this process, the answer to how I am going to both be a solider and a poet will probably just resolve itself. I’m lucky though that our military is a good one and I shouldn’t have to worry about getting ‘in trouble’. It probably just has more to do with the fact that I wonder how a poet would be regarded by the troops I lead.
Below are three poems that give an idea of my direction, style, and poetic voice. MTF (more to follow).
Graduation
_____
NO ONE ATTEMPTED
I am a gray tree,
I have to start somewhere.
An estuary, or the place
where the whole choir stood,
or the the thunder knocking about,
a funny conversation
bled onto bandages
or written as comfort
under the sound of the rain,
the sun hidden behind blouses
a fist above the horizon.
Today is not unlike the others.
I’ve watched hundreds
of half-finished, half-thought-out days
go down over the thirsty drain.
In vain I tried to pick the lock
of the iron gate. I’ve wielded my pen
like a welder’s stick melting down
the impeccable into pre-storm darkness.
I’ve sucked blood out of poems
mistaking it for poison.
I’ve run down dead-end streets
that ended long after street stopped.
I trusted the intensity of the work
to do the longing
like pedaling leaves
knotted to trees.
I look at the leaves
to read in a broad way
any the divination that remains.
As the week before,
so much is lost already,
the violent street or stolen
from a man without a face,
or taken from a mouth
deciphering wisdom
to pure nonsense,
or nestled amid wild
grapes vines twisting
to the top of trees.
Writing poetry is walking
through an orchard
with a basket hoping
something will fall into it.
Thinking of you helps.
Keeps the words from arguing,
teeth gnashing at the throat.
It’s not that thinking of you
means I can sit down
and write 40 poems,
as simply as coughing.
You’ve always helped me
crumble the chip off my shoulder.
I go back or forward
and wonder what my face
looks like to you.
In time the longing
clogs the plain nothingness.
There are the mountains,
the wringing rivers, autumn ridges,
red maples, the leaves
of the poplars flashing,
apple trees swollen with sores,
desecrated woodlands
and abandoned farmlands,
the dried up harrowed
hallowed fields,
the wrinkled rim of the miracle.
I’ve tried to allow
the free mixing of colours.
Listened to what could be made.
I am the wind, the dry earth.
My blood. These words.
Fingers outstretched.
Brazen. Foolish.
DORCHESTER SQUARE
I was to sew up some poems
but I have no thread, so instead
I’m hammering a rusty beer
killing time until it tries to do me.
I am heading back to the military base
where I am practicing to kill
things other than just time.
At home, my children are asking
where I have I gone?
Was there for the weekend,
whittled down into one day.
First time in months.
We all go where we have to go.
I told them I was doing this for them,
my wife and my three daughters.
Smiles were broken sunlight.
Lift up that head of yours,
hold your head high.
Do not weep.
My sudden appearance
and disappearance,
the screech of drama,
my children’s innocence,
my wife searching the remains of her life,
all those things I’ve forgotten to say
buried under the ground.
Why didn’t my love for them
keep us together, gathered around the table?
Last night I did not say good-bye
and we all went to sleep
like it was any other night.
At 4:00am I left.
I hope to make it home again soon.
I am not sure when that will be.
During the flight, I held their heads
in my heart. My three little girls.
Small pools of perfect water.
My wildflower wife.
Tears are the thread with which
I snitch this poem.
Good bye.
I have to go now to catch the bus
and pass through the next door
where I will clean my snarling rifle,
shine my boots, wash my rotting clothes
from the previous weeks training,
whatever the public needs me to do,
so they can be more kind.
When I am deployed overseas,
my children have already saved my life.
I could do better with saving theirs.
We all go where we have to go.
I will dream of swimming
through pools of water.
I will pick wildflowers up into my arms.
The last sip of beer is gone.
AFGHANISTAN
The soldier-teacher,
recently back from war,
gave our infantry class
his mud speech.
We are at war, he tells us,
and today is your last day
as civilians. We are shocked.
He is our medicine man,
our shaman, his fist
pumping in the air
as his magic grew.
His spell was nearing,
germinating in us.
Shot seven times,
he should have been left in hell,
but the Infantry dug him up
and brought him to the mad
broad desert to keep
us new recruits safe.
As he spoke,
the sacrifice of soldiers
stop giving us
a sickly feeling of slaughter,
wrong from the start.
It aroused feelings of the old sense:
pride, adventure. By the end
we would have sailed
on chopped seas
blissfully seasick for a chance
to prove our worth.
He spoke about hammering
the enemy, quarrying
the mud walls of compounds
to mine for weapons.
Tore buildings from their roots
like broken jaws to silence the enemy.
Built his own roads with artillery,
he pulled the rotten teeth
out of snarling villages
until they smiled like angels
at the daybreak’s meeting
of melting steel.
He tossed bridges
into rivers and built new ones
until the people who lived there
no longer recognized themselves,
out of place in the farmer’s garden.
Recommendations (16)
-
Hugh Askew
Omaha, Nebraska, United States -
a211423
Clearlake, California, United States -
Karl Gotthardt - albertacowpoke
Redwater, Alberta, Canada -
Babel-Fish
Negros Oriental, Philippines



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 16:17 on November 17th, 2009
To be truthful I don't like the form of poetry you are writing after about the 12 line I got bored and did not want to go on through a continued shopping like list. Some people may like this type of poetry but I prefer the style Keats.
Source: en.wikipedia.org
There has to be feeling.
However I wish you the best
at 14:47 on November 18th, 2009
Yeah, poetry is kind of a personal thing. but what is intereting about soldierpoet is that he is both a soldier and a published poet so I think the poetry that will follow as he continues to submit to me should be interesting.
- Sign In or Join to post comments
Karl Gotthardt - albertacowpokeat 06:18 on November 18th, 2009
I am retired from the Canadian Forces (PPCLI). If these poems bring you solace and let you face what you are about to enter into, keep writing them. I suspect that you will try to encompass in your poems what you are feeling during your tour.
Good Luck and Best Wishes for your safe return.
at 14:45 on November 18th, 2009
These poems are not mine but are written from a soldier who is also a published poet. He will be keeping me up to date with new material as he approaches his posting in afghanistan... so stay tuned.
at 15:55 on November 18th, 2009
Tears are the thread with which
I snitch this poem.
With tears is how I read Dorchester Square.
Soldierpoet writes blank verse in the immediacy of his experience. The poetry of ecstatic emotion be it sonnet, haiku or blank is no less powerful.
I look forward to reading future poetry from soldierpoet.
I never hear the word "escape"
Without a quicker blood,
A sudden expectation,
A flying attitude
I never hear of prisons broad
By soldiers battered down,
But I tug childish at my bars--
Only to fail again!
Emily Dickinson
- Sign In or Join to post comments
Alex Roissetter (not verified)at 01:39 on December 17th, 2009
Hello there Soldierpoet. I am a serving soldier in the British Army and I too am a published poet. I have been in for 6yrs now and started writing in 07 when I was in Afghan and continued up to now through a tour in Iraq as well. It is very strange how you use Soldierpoet because I use Poet Soldier as my avatar name though I do not hide my true name with my writing and most of those that I work with are aware of my work. I am also a Moderator for a website called forcespoetry.com, it is a website for those that have been effected by war, either as a family member with someone close to them as a soldier, those that suffer from PTSD or even soldierpoets themselves. You do not have to identify your name and can remain completely nom de plume. It would be brilliant if you are up for joining if you wish. I do like your poetry and believe me when I say that through your experiences out on tour it will flourish. Please do not try and force it though and write from your heart and you will hit on points that you did not know that readers had. I hope to see/hear from you soon. Best wishes. Alex Roissetter (Poet Soldier)