Taxloss
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Mon Apr-17-06 08:42 AM
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I don't usually write poetry, but felt the germ of an idea creep in while looking through a friends photographs of a recent trip to Basra. I consider it a work in progress, so feel free to suggest changes/improvements/that I give up writing and become a plumber. And I hope the debt to Robert Lowell isn't too obvious.
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The Basra Corniche
There is grit between the drummer's teeth On the Basra Corniche A scrape of soil, of dust Caught in the mouth A gold filling of land
In the gnawing city behind Horns and sirens grin Against unsmiling semi-automatic crackle And music, and music from everywhere, laughs With it, he drums, tasting the grit
Young men stroll earnestly together Murmuring family, politics, friends, business, and politics They are serious - to relax is serious Important business, in Gulf-cooled breeze The drummer knows
There is no seaborn balm In his town, five roadblocks from there Dry winds pick at the fine soil Leaving grit in his teeth A communion with country, with his family's land.
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NMMNG
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Tue Apr-18-06 01:52 AM
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| 1. Being no literary critic, I can only comment on the feelings it evokes |
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And those feelings are mixed. Joy, rage, depression. That these young men can still manage to enjoy themselves amidst a warzone, but that they must endure the chaos of roadblocks, sirens and semi-automatic gunfire all around them as they try to have a simple evening of fun. Never knowing if they will be safe, yet unwilling to cower in their homes--to be victims of fear as well as potential victims of the war.
I enjoyed your poem Taxloss. :thumbsup:
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Taxloss
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Tue Apr-18-06 06:52 AM
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I suppose I was just trying to express what my friend had been telling me about - that the situation is awful, if anything worse than the version we get, but that there is still a strange amount of normality around. We might talk about withdrawal, but the Iraqis can't "withdraw", it's their country, and they want to stick with it - the grit in the teeth, the thing that won't go away, the land. A sort of "even in the midst of death, life goes on" type of sentiment.
I think it needs a bit of tweaking and refining. There are several elements I'm not content with.
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Fri Oct 24th 2025, 06:23 AM
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