Meditations of a Sniper They sent me up this tower three days ago, Just my rifle, rations, and a radio. From here I can scope out most of the town-- The road leading in, the storefronts, alleys. I have to keep down, so I crawl on my belly Or roll round the dusty old slats of the floor. With my friend here, it's just one shot, one kill; I whisper in that handset and I can bring down all hell. Now look at that tomcat, he thinks he's alone, No one watching him stalk. Anything moves-- Bird on a phone line, the first chimney smoke, Wisps the color of slate--the eye pounces Long before the brain can evaluate. I glance at a clothesline strung between pulleys; There's something about it makes me homesick. With people you only look at their hands: What have I got, a civilian or a shooter? An invisible family hangs in the wind-- Overalls, a dress, two sets of pajamas. This war makes me feel like an intruder. One of our shells ripped a hole in the roof, Mangling the cogs of the old town clock. Sometimes nothing stirs for hours below, But I'll turn, look up at a jagged sky, And see clouds slipping past. It lets me know The world continues to spin. By my canteen Two pale blue eggs hunker down in a nest-- Or so it seems as I blow off the dust.
Meditations of a Sniper.
Walsh, Patrick (American writer)
Meditations of a Sniper They sent me up this tower three days ago, Just my rifle, rations, and a radio. From here I can scope out most of the town-- The road leading in, the storefronts, alleys. I have to keep down, so I crawl on my belly Or roll round the dusty old slats of the floor. With my friend here, it's just one shot, one kill; I whisper in that handset and I can bring down all hell. Now look at that tomcat, he thinks he's alone, No one watching him stalk. Anything moves-- Bird on a phone line, the first chimney smoke, Wisps the color of slate--the eye pounces Long before the brain can evaluate. I glance at a clothesline strung between pulleys; There's something about it makes me homesick. With people you only look at their hands: What have I got, a civilian or a shooter? An invisible family hangs in the wind-- Overalls, a dress, two sets of pajamas. This war makes me feel like an intruder. One of our shells ripped a hole in the roof, Mangling the cogs of the old town clock. Sometimes nothing stirs for hours below, But I'll turn, look up at a jagged sky, And see clouds slipping past. It lets me know The world continues to spin. By my canteen Two pale blue eggs hunker down in a nest-- Or so it seems as I blow off the dust.