Tin Soldiers Never Die
They are made to last forever

Tin Soldiers Never Die
They march at night,
steel boots on stone,
faces empty,
hearts hollowed by war.
Tin soldiers never die,
though men fall,
bones buried under flags,
eyes fading into smoke.
The streets are quiet,
echoes of orders linger,
rifles glinting
like ghosts in moonlight.
Children watch,
wide-eyed and trembling,
dreams shattered
before they learn to speak.
They carry memories
that are not theirs,
marching for power,
for fear, for nothing.
Houses crumble,
walls crumble,
wind carries names
that will not be remembered.
Tin soldiers never die,
they return in shadows,
in nightmares,
in the trembling hands of mothers.
The sky opens,
fire rains down,
the world counts
what is left of hope.
Somewhere a soldier whispers,
“I wanted peace,”
but the brass voice
does not answer.
Blood and dust mix,
footsteps fall into silence,
yet the march goes on,
metal clanging against metal.
Tin soldiers never die,
they walk through memory,
through loss, through grief,
through the lives they took.
God save the living,
and forgive the dead,
for they were only soldiers,
marching for someone else.

About the Creator
Marie381Uk
I've been writing poetry since the age of fourteen. With pen in hand, I wander through realms unseen. The pen holds power; ink reveals hidden thoughts. A poet may speak truth or weave a tale. You decide. Let pen and ink capture your mind❤️


Comments (1)
What a perfect ode to the veterans both living and dead.