Best Resources for Poets and WritersWinning Writers



Login to The Best Free Poetry Contests
Login to Poetry Contest Insider

 


Contest Database
Poetry Contest Insider
The Best Free Poetry Contests
Contests to Avoid
Contests Sponsored by Winning Writers
War Poetry Contest
Guidelines
FAQ
Submit Online
Submit by Mail
Past Winners
Wergle Flomp Free
Poetry Contest
Contests Assisted by Winning Writers
Tom Howard/John H. Reid Poetry Contest
Tom Howard/John H. Reid Short Story Contest
Margaret Reid Poetry Contest

Contests : War Poetry Contest : Past Winners : 2004 : Scott Ennis

Honorable Mention - Scott Ennis

THE BULLET'S TALE

As I cooled I awoke
and felt the heat
and smelled the smoke
which never really seemed to clear away.

I was rolled into a machine
with a million of my brothers,
all the same, exactly like the others
with the name .223 stamped firmly on my back,
then quickly packed
into a cardboard box.

For months I waited,
rattling against my comrades
in the dark, hearing nothing.
Then a jet engine roar.
Then yelling and explosions.
My box was suddenly cracked harshly open
and I fell upon a foreign dusty ground.

I lay there, one round.

I saw the hand of Private First Class Galloway
pick me up, trembling slightly,
wild terror on his face.
Mingled with sweat and resignation,
breathing heavy
with his back against a wall,
he jammed me in his magazine.

He tapped the magazine
once against his Kevlar helmet
and I felt my self slide back,
seated properly
against some mechanism.
The magazine was then forced,
coated with sand and oil,
grating into his weapon.

I felt the bolt release
and kick me forward
locked and loaded,
and I stared straight up the barrel,
past the spiral rifling
and the flower-like flash suppressor
at the hot blue sky.

As PFC Galloway lowered his rifle,
my fate,
I saw in sequence:
a cloud,
a roof,
a wall,
a road,
a man.

Something exploded inside me
and I felt the rush
of the gun barrel
with a heated urgency.

The nameless lieutenant held
a Kalashnikov with a cracked stock,
bound by duct tape.

I rose in my trajectory
above his face
and saw his men fanned out behind him.
One wounded and grimacing in pain.
One desperately pulling at a jammed rifle.
One who looked like his cousin or brother.

Then I fell into his chest.

I tumbled through his gut
and all I saw was red blood
and all I heard was
the ripping sounds of fabric,
and the ripping sounds of flesh,
and the ripping sounds of organs, soft and subtle.

Then there was a dull thud
as I lodged firmly in the bone of his pelvis.

The battle noises eventually subsided
and I briefly heard women wailing,
then shovels full of dirt
thumping against a hollow chest.

It was dark and stank
of rotting flesh
for many months,
and then it was just dark.

It has now been a hundred years.
I never heard who won the war.
I just sleep here,
nestled in the pelvic bone
of one of the war's casualties.

I often think
about that cloud I saw
in that blue sky
beyond the rifling
and the flower-like flash suppressor.


This poem won an Honorable Mention in the 2004 War Poetry Contest sponsored by Winning Writers. Author Scott Ennis received a $50 award. Copyright is reserved to the author.


About Scott Ennis
At present, Scott Ennis lives and works in Minneapolis. He spent 13 years (1983-1996) in the Army, National Guard, and Army Reserves as a Combat Engineer, Special Operations Engineer, and Military Intelligence Counter-Intelligence Agent. He also spent 2 years (1985-1987) as a Mormon missionary in the Republic of South Africa. Scott graduated from Weber State University in 1993 with a degree in English. He presented original poetry and critical essays 3 years in a row at the National Undergraduate Literature Conference.

Scott Ennis                                                                                                                                                                                                                                



Subscribe to our feed RSS Feed | Free Newsletter | Customer Service | Contact Us | Privacy | Advertise

Copyright 2001-2012, Winning Writers, Inc. Site design by EyeArchitect.
Beyond fair use, no part of this website may be reproduced without permission.
All rights reserved.