I’ve learnt to wash in petrol tins, and shave myself in tea
Whilst balancing the fragments of a mirror on my knee
I’ve learnt to dodge the eighty-eights, and flying lumps of lead
And to keep a foot of sand between a Stuka and my head
I’ve learnt to keep my ration bag crammed full of buckshee food
And to take my army ration, and to pinch what else I could
I’ve learnt to cook my bully beef with candle-ends and string
In an empty petrol can, or any other thing
I’ve learnt to use my jack-knife for anything I please
A bread-knife, or a chopper, or a prong for toasting cheese
I’ve learnt to gather souvenirs, that home I hoped to send
And hump them round for months and months, and dump them in the end
But one day when this blooming war is just a memory
I’ll laugh at all these troubles, when I’m drifting o’er the sea
But until that longed-for day arrives, I’ll have to be content
With bully-beef and rice and prunes, and sleeping in a tent.
(N.J. Trapnell)
More Poetry from N.J. Trapnell:
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: War & Peace Poems, Memory Poems, Tea PoemsBased on Keywords: petrol, ration, souvenirs, prunes, prong, toasting, chopper, candle-ends, jack-knife, buckshee, bread-knife