Friday, 6 May 2022

That House with the Red Roof by Elizabeth Obadina


That house with the red roof

Rainproof, fireproof, bulletproof

But not fool proof; not bombproof.

Empty now as the soldiers march through

Boulevards deserted where lilacs once grew

Desecration where once was a beautiful view.

Ravaged – not for the first time; perhaps not for the last

Although many thought War was long gone, long past,

Not lurking in shadows for the buglers’ next blast.

Regroup! Re-assemble! Soldiers Rest Up and Return!

Let strife loose again! Once again nurture sturm

For which hustlers and armourers and charlatans yearn.

And that house with the red roof sees a new generation weep

As not for the first time has War marched down that street

Where not for the last time innocents find a last, blood-soaked sleep.

Centuries pass and that house with its pretty incarnadine roof is so admired

By tourists seduced by blue skies, plazas and pretty church spires.

But an indifferent sun also shines on cruelty, evil and marching empires.

Over and again Europe’s streets ring to pitched sounds of battle.

          From antiquities’ ‘heroes’ seizing land, slaves and chattels

          To modern day Goths killing folk just like cattle.

That house with the red roof has seen it all:

          Seen its heavy red tiles hurled down, forcing warriors to stall

          Their attacks, and defenders quaking behind its pretty white walls.

Terracotta - pure clay – pure baked earth – pure rock residue

With nothing living to pollute tiles of pretty iron-red hue -

Iron-red like blood.  But terracotta's just dust God never blew life into.

And all over the world, everywhere where there’s man

           Are homes with red roofs; tranquil and safe but for the men who still plan

          To fight for Earth’s treasures howsoever they can.

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