Charlie and I, neighbors, would scoop foxholes
in his back yard for our little green army men
and with a stone on a string buried beneath
packed dirt, a jerk exploded our grenades;
our carefully arranged troops, unsuspecting,
were flung into an air of sweet chaos.
They would survive, only dirtied, to endure
by poly/plastic toughness, more assaults;
to rise and fall again and again without protest.
We taught ourselves to shoot; mimic the sound:
tongue-tip against the hard palate
capturing breath to spit-out air
securing an eternal arsenal;
ammo until our throats ached.
There were no points for body counts, no thrill
from carnage, rivulets of blood,
or screams of torture;
only our boisterous narration,
our mayhem play…….and the ecstatic scent
of fresh scooped earth’s essence and cool
red dirt staining raw fingertips
as Charlie and I rapturously sweated
another white-hot summer day away.
war games 1957: Toys Charlie and I would scoop foxholes in the yard for our little green army men and with a rock on a string, buried beneath packed-dirt, a jerk exploded our grenades; our carefully arranged troops, ambushed, were flung into an air of sweaty chaos. They would survive, only dirtied, to endure by poly-plastic toughness more assaults; to rise and fall, again…again, without protest. We taught ourselves to shoot; mimic the sound: tongue-tip against hard palate, captured breath spit-out rhythmically; an eternal arsenal; ammo until our throats ached from firing. There were no body-count points, no thrill of carnage, rivulets of blood, torturous screams; only boisterous narration, but most remembered: the ecstatic scent of fresh scooped earths essence and the cool, red dirt staining my raw fingertips.
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