Rations and Ruins
While war drums beat and soldiers wept.
A cracker dry, a sliver thin—
A meal was packed in steel and tin.
No feast, no fire, just powdered brew,
And hope inside a plastic chew.
A packet meant to keep the breath
One step ahead of certain death.
The taste of ash, a metallic tang,
A hollow echo where laughter once rang.
The whispered prayers, the silent dread—
For sustenance meant for the living, not the dead.
The field was fed by factory fare,
No kitchens warmed the smoky air.
Just rations marked with code and date—
A soldier’s fate, a soldier’s plate.
Beneath the camouflage, a gnawing ache,
For home-baked bread, for goodness’ sake.
The endless wait for dawn, for night,
Fueled by the promise of the next stale bite.
Each morsel a reminder of the world they'd left—
Of comfort, of love, of lives bereft.
The guns fell still. The silence burned.
But peace was not what peace had earned.
The cities crumbled into dust,
And mouths grew hollow in the rust.
No more the packs, no aid, no bread—
The living envied now the dead.
The war was gone, but in its trail
Was hunger’s reign and stomachs pale.
The stench of decay, a constant shroud,
Over empty streets and a weeping crowd.
Children played with shards and bone,
Where once a village stood alone.
A mother boiled a stone in grief,
To soothe her child with ghost relief.
Their eyes, wide and old beyond their years,
Reflecting endless hunger, endless tears.
The phantom scent of spices gone,
Haunting the dawn, and each silent morn.
The earth itself, parched and cracked,
A witness to the future—hollow, sacked.
The land consumed, the spirit torn,
A world reborn in desolation, worn.
No victory parades, no flags unfurled—
Just echoes in a broken world.
The whispers carried on the breeze,
Of what was lost, and what now deceives.
The vacant stares, the skeletal frame,
A monument to mankind’s shame.
We fed the war with food and men,
And starved the world from now till then.
The battles end, the bodies lie—
But hunger stays, and asks us why.
It haunts the dreams, it chills the bone,
A silent victor on a desolate throne.
And in the rubble where life used to bloom,
Hunger remains—war’s eternal tomb.
Comments
Post a Comment