Works From The Wise Ol' Hillbilly
The Seventh Day


On War
© 1990, R.E.Dalton



  A battlefield is much more than just a place where human beings are maimed and slain. 
It is a gory billboard whereupon the colossal stupidity of mankind is displayed before the universe.
War is never necessary. Resistance is necessary, but only as a last resort for stopping a butchery already begun. It is incomprehensible, after so many millions have been slaughtered, that men still persist in the horrible aspiration to destroy one another. Consider what is really lost.
Each person's mind, whether they be rich or poor, large or small, genius or moron, contains invaluable treasures of experience and thought which can never be replaced. There are dreams that, if nurtured and preserved, might solve problems which have plagued mankind from time's beginning. There are visions of great masterpieces of art and literature which will never be created; knowledge precious to humanity that only one soul possessed. All destroyed. The inventory is limitless.
"The Seventh Day" dawns on a place of such terrible destruction. But on this battlefield, wisdom prevails over hatred. Here, a great lesson is learned... if only the story were true.


The Seventh Day

 
In the morning air you could hear the clack 
Of retraction levers snapping back 
And safety catches opening death's cell door. 
The early sun was having fun 
Bouncing sparkles off the guns 
Of a hundred men in green prepared for war. 
 
In a wooded glen across the way 
A hundred others dressed in gray 
Prepared a violent charge 'gainst those in green. 
Their bodies tired, their clothing torn, 
Their bearded faces gaunt and worn, 
Spurred on by unknown force that none had seen. 
 
For six days now, the shot and shell 
Had plunged them into man-made hell 
And the dawning of the seventh had arrived. 
A gentle breeze rose from the west 
And stroked the torn and battered breast 
Of the bitter brae that bled as though alive. 
 
A thousand dead, and maybe two, 
Lay strewn beneath the morning dew 
In horrid gestures, stiffened, stark and still. 
But the scene portrayed, a lesson told, 
For though they rested white and cold, 
They lay "together" there upon the hill. 
 
Amid the rows of fallen gray 
The dead in green there also lay 
As though reclining leisurely in the sun. 
A ghostly aura there suggested 
They weren't dead, but only rested 
Side by side in friendship, every one. 
 
Death bears no grudge, the silence claimed; 
No malice stood amid the maimed 
And no such thing as conflict, friend or foe. 
They reclined resigned to a fact of fate; 
What once was enemy now was mate, 
For all had gone where every man must go. 
 
The dead leaves tumbled 'cross their chests 
And found no hatred in their breasts, 
For all was placid now, and death serene. 
No hand was raised in anger there 
Amid the quiet morning air, 
Just peace and coexistence played the scene. 
 
The dead in green cared not that day 
That his arm embraced the man in gray 
And the gray did not rebuke the green's caress. 
No prejudice rose 'gainst shade of skin 
Or shape of eyes, or birth or kin 
Or creed or size, or type or style of dress. 
 
Not one dead body cringed or shied 
From another lying by his side 
Or paid a heed to the uniform he wore. 
No voice was raised against another; 
Death decreed that all were brothers 
And hatred in their hearts would reign no more. 

The panorama, thus unfolded, 
Chided now, and even scolded 
Those now left alive on either side. 
"When you are dead," the scene had said, 
"You'll coexist like us instead 
Of killing fellow men you can't abide." 
 
The message rose quite strong that day 
From those reposed in green and gray 
And both sides seemed to falter in their quest. 
If the gory dead in no-man's land 
Could lie together hand in hand, 
Why could not the living stand the test? 
 
What purpose had been served out here, 
Except to lose all those held dear 
To a futile fight where all had failed when tested? 
So the weapons fell from both sides' hands 
And they walked away from no-man's land... 
And so it was, on the seventh day, they rested. 

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