Oral History and Military Publishing

Two Armies by Stephen Spender

PostImage for Representational Purposes only.

A unique and thoughtful poem that asks readers to remember humankind's commonalities.

Deep in the winter plain, two armies

Dig their machinery, to destroy each other.

Men freeze and hunger. No one is given leave

On either side, except the dead, and wounded.

These have their leave; while new battalions wait

On time at last to bring them violent peace.

All have become so nervous and so cold

That each man hates the cause and distant words

Which brought him here, more terribly than bullets.

Once a boy hummed a popular marching song,

Once a novice hand flapped the salute;

The voice was choked, the lifted hand fell,

Shot through the wrist by those of his own side.

From their numb harvest all would flee, except

For discipline drilled once in an iron school

Which holds them at the point of a revolver.

Yet when they sleep, the images of home

Ride wishing horses of escape

Which herd the plain in a mass unspoken poem.

Finally, they cease to hate: for although hate

Bursts from the air and whips the earth like hail

Or pours it up in fountains to marvel at,

And although hundreds fell, who can connect

The inexhaustible anger of the guns

With the dumb patience of these tormented animals?

Clean silence drops at night when a little walk

Divides the sleeping armies, each

Huddled in linen woven by remote hands.

When the machines are stilled, a common suffering

Whitens the air with breath and makes both one

As though these enemies slept in each other's arms.

Only the lucid friend to aerial raiders,

The brilliant pilot moon, stares down

Upon the plain she makes a shining bone

Cut by the shadow of many thousand bones.

Where amber clouds scatter on no-man's-land

She regards death and time throw up

The furious words and minerals which kill life.