About This Book
A sequence of poems confronts the realities of war and its aftermath, alternating rousing martial imagery with intimate scenes of suffering and care. Several pieces use drumbeat and march motifs to evoke public fervor, urban energy, and battlefield noise, while other poems linger at bivouacs, hospital wards, and graves to record private grief and the tending of the wounded. Recurrent contrasts between nature’s continuity and human violence shape reflections on mourning, duty, and reconciliation, producing shifts from trumpetlike exultation to elegiac tenderness and quiet moral reckoning.
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