Monday 1 August 2011

The Horn, Silenced

The dust from the shuffling of a million feet,
Obscuring the sun in its appalling heat.
The mothers and children, the men without herds,
Moving forward towards nothing - looking back without words.

The borders are blurred when the drought is complete,
And the crops turn to dust under shuffling feet.
There's a way to the camp, with the promise of water,
So a couple move on with the corpse of their daughter.

Kwashiorkur relentless, and the young will die first -
Armageddon triumphant (malnutrition and thirst.)
Still the warlords deny all the death in their land,
Though the harvest's a bounty of dust, dirt and sand.

At the gate stand two thugs, and they greet with a shove;
Still the couple persist with their bundle of love.
Join the mob at the truck, where the water's in flight,
Then the search for a roof, and some ground for the night.

I have seen quite enough, so I switch off the news,
And I head for the fridge for a couple of brews.
While a husband and wife face a hole in the ground,
And the mummified death of a love that they'd found.

Then I reach for a pen, pop a cheque in the post,
For an easing of guilt, then I'm done - well, almost.
I should do it again in a week, month or year;
For the need will continue beyond this, I fear.

And the pair walk away to an uncertain fate,
Just two pawns on the board of Somalian hate.
Now a wind swirls the dust on that long-barren plain,
Where a cross on a grave marks unbearable pain.

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