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  1. #1

    Default Walking down the good side of memory lane

    Veterans do bring back bad memories - but they also bring back good memories.

    There was the time when we were dog-tired but RHU would not let us sleep.....


    QUIET, PLEASE!

    Thirty-six sleepless hours
    Later, mission complete,
    We called in and asked the wheels
    To come and get us.

    Back at Bindura base, dead on our feet
    We asked for a place to sleep in.
    Food, beer, baths - all these could wait.
    Sleep was what our bodies craved.

    They gave us
    Half a barrack, a long long room with
    A shaky partition down the middle.
    Half for us and half for RHU.

    We cared not.
    It had a roof and it had beds.
    We dumped our kit and hit the sack. But
    As glorious sleep began to fold around us -
    The noise began.
    RHU had passes. RHU was going to town.
    And RHU was being damn noisy about getting ready.

    We shouted, "Keep it down."
    And they laughed at us.
    We shouted, "We're trying to sleep."
    And they laughed at us.
    We shouted, "Cut the noise - or else"
    And they laughed even louder.

    Carlos snatched up his webbing and
    Checked his grenades - frag, phos. and smoke - and
    With great restraint
    Selected smoke. Jim
    Caught the plan and pulled his own.

    The pins came out and two

    Polite messages sailed
    Over the wooden wall, followed
    By one brief, frozen moment
    When the levers popped off as they hit the floor;
    Cries of "Grenade" and
    The sound of breaking glass as those
    Unable
    To break the growing traffic jam around the door
    Hit unopened windows and then rolled clear.
    A few receding cries
    Of "Mad bastards” echoed down the path
    Followed by silence, sweet silence and, finally

    Sleep.


    ---------- Post added at 13:13 ---------- Previous post was at 13:08 ----------

    ....and the memories of comradeship.


    MEMORIES
    In my white-haired years
    When I look back
    At all this. I think
    One thing will stand proud
    In my old man's anecdotes.

    The many nights when I
    And my friends
    Gathered round the canteen truck
    In a blacked-out camp
    To renew the bond, flee the moment
    In a crate of beer.

    I will never forget
    The strange, warm feeling
    Of squatting in a circle
    No lights but pulsing cigarette tips
    No noise, bar the quiet thread of conversation.
    Companionship. A strange companionship.

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Walking down the good side of memory lane

    haha. I can only imagine what a scene that was.

  3. #3

    Default Walking down the good side of memory lane

    ... and to experience the wildlife in its natural environment


    CHARGING RHINO
    They looked good
    Lying by the waterhole. And
    They looked good
    Standing by the waterhole, but
    They did not look good
    Charging straight at us with
    A long, sharp horn and
    Two tonnes of muscle thundering
    Towards us at thirty kilometres an hour, so
    We did not
    Contest their right of way. Instead
    We dove
    Into the thornbushes
    And hugged their tiny daggers to us
    While the rhino thundered past.

    Crawled out, after
    Plucking each painful barb
    Out from our lacerated flesh
    While thanking this prickly vegetation for
    Allowing us to embrace it
    In this, the moment of our need.


    ---------- Post added at 13:22 ---------- Previous post was at 13:17 ----------

    ....and the time we awarded ourselves some well-earned but unoffical leave.


    AWOL

    Two
    Hot, dirty, dangerous weeks later
    Mozambique - finally
    Lay behind and
    Mount Darwin loomed ahead.

    We dropped our kit; hit the bar
    And sank a beer or twelve
    Before Bright Lights beckoned as
    The perfect cure for Recce blues.

    We cut a pilot from the herd
    And salved him with persuasion. So much so, that
    Before the clock had ticked again, we
    Were absent, airborne and awol.

    And so,
    Dirty, unshaven, loaded down
    With all our uncouth accoutrements of war
    We found ourselves in Salisbury town.
    Well-oiled,
    For we had worked our way through
    Three crates of liberated Army beer.

    Now
    Girls dont like grenades. Filthy bodies
    Make a lousy come-on line.
    Drinking needs money. We needed
    Wheels to get to town.
    So.


    Laundry lines lost their jeans.

    Garden taps scoured our dirt. Silver tongues
    Parted people from their money. We adopted
    A 45 which stood
    With tarpaulined ammo load and - keys, dangling
    With temptation. A sentry,
    Trapped on beat at the main camp gate,
    Was gently persuaded; took charge
    Of our weapons and webbing; grenades and guns.

    Then, at last
    Bright Lights beckoned ahead.

    High Chaparral
    Was our first port of call. We hungrily
    Ran our eyes down the menu. Ordered,
    Devoured
    Our first good meal for weeks. Washed down
    By beer, of course. Then back
    To where the 45 stood
    And off to Coq d'Or.

    From then, the details
    Become blurred, hazed by a fog
    Of ouzo and coke. But when
    We staggered out to our faithful 45,
    Helped our chosen ladies aboard, while nursing bruised knuckles,
    We believed
    A good time was had by all.

    A belief we still shared when, spent,
    We woke in the cold, thudding dawnlight
    At somebody's house. Pulled
    Ourselves together and prepared
    For our return to Darwin base. Only
    To find that, somehow
    We'd gotten the 45 into the yard
    But could not get it out again.

    We battled

    With gates and fences as the 45's wheels
    Tore up the lawn and
    The neighbour's frenzied shouts
    Knifed through our bleeding eyes. Until
    All patience lost, we climbed aboard
    And drove the 45 at the wall, leaving
    Frenzied neighbour dwindling off, while
    He danced upon the fragments of his wall.

    Back at camp, we
    Claimed our weapons; sneaked the 45 back
    Cadged a lift and, back at Darwin base,
    (With crazy smiles upon our faces)
    Endured being shouted at, while
    We packed -
    For Mozambique, again.


    ---------- Post added at 13:25 ---------- Previous post was at 13:22 ----------

    ...and then, looking back and remembering those Zambezi dawns.


    DAWN IN AN AFRICAN SKY

    I have watched, many times, as
    A sullen, glowing ball of fire rises, through
    The fresh African dawn, throwing
    Its fierce, new light upon
    This boundless land of ours.

    Sat, surrounding a steaming coffee cup
    Seen my breath
    Mist out slowly, while
    A cold dawn=s growing glow covers
    The Drakensberg=s peaks and crags.

    Crouched, next
    To a low, red fire
    While the world springs
    To urgent life around me, with
    That sudden, early sun as
    It leers and beats down upon
    The parched, dry, Bosveld spaces.

    Risen,
    Rubbed the sleep out from my eyes, watched
    The endless Indian Ocean give up its grip,
    Release
    A rising sun, which painted
    Rich, red colours on
    The rolling waters, as they ran
    Headlong, for the beach.

    But still, my greatest love for
    The day=s first, fresh breath, is when
    The fierce, Zambezi sun looms up
    From deep beneath the river=s waters, calling
    All the Valley=s creatures, back
    To life again.


    ---------- Post added at 13:29 ---------- Previous post was at 13:25 ----------

    ...and thinking what golden experiences I had that my children will never have. (That's not quite true in this 2011 now since my son has grown into a bosman who hates the city.)


    YOUNG GROWS THE MEMORY

    I yearn to be
    Alone - in the bush again, where
    My ears can open
    To the music of the doves; to the wild soft wind, caressing
    The leaves of the trees.

    Raise my eyes
    To African hills, their sheer rock cliffs
    Dropping, down, to drown
    In muddy, deep rivers.
    To kopjies, crowned with scattered boulders,
    Their gullies filled with thornbush trees.

    I want
    To build a deadwood fire
    On the lonely banks of a far-off river - which once I knew -
    Grill fresh fish on red-eyed coals
    Sip scalding, sweet, black coffee
    From an old tin mug I used to own.

    My memories cry out
    For springbok leaping on an open veldt,
    Rhino, standing like stone, alone, beneath a tree.
    The elephant's ears laid flat, as he warns -
    Stay back, stay back.

    My children, my children,
    How I want to share with you
    The land I left behind - lost,
    And gave to you, instead,
    Tar, cement, computers and TV shows.

    ....Yup, I guess there are many things I miss about the war years, many things to make up for the bad memories.

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