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  • 标题:Meditations of a Sniper.
  • 作者:Walsh, Patrick (American writer)
  • 期刊名称:War, Literature & The Arts
  • 印刷版ISSN:1046-6967
  • 出版年度:2013
  • 期号:January
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:U.S. Air Force Academy, Department of English
  • 摘要:
     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.  
  • 关键词:Human condition;Morality of war;Snipers

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. 


PATRICK WALSH served four years as an infantry officer in the 25th Infantry Division. His poems have appeared in journals and newspapers both here and abroad, including Barrow Street, The Christian Science Monitor, Chronogram, Evergreen Review, The Hudson Review, The Malahat Review, Poetry New Zealand, Quadrant, and scene4 magazine. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

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