Walls Poem by Gert Strydom

Walls



(In answer to W.E.G. Louw)

We did receive this country as property
that we did rather live in
as to conquer with a flint lock rifle
and we came to the open wide veldt,

did erect walls
to hold out the enemy, the predator
and the baboon,
did create cultivated fields,

even at places
where crops do not really belong,
out of our own crops of maize, wheat
and cattle did live, did map down a piece of land,

until Ratel armoured cars, Olifant main battle tanks
and Mirage fighter planes
did have to stop the enemy that were surrounding us,
where we did won battle upon battle and did destroy the Cubans
and a bald headed man did bring about great calamity,

where his brothers cannot anymore eat a piece of own bread,
where he did create beggars out of the Afrikaner nation,
did forget of the right of existence of his own brothers
and all walls do decay
and foreigners from right over Africa do stream in.

[Reference: “Mure” (Walls) by W.E.G. Louw.]

Thursday, October 15, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: life
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Gert Strydom

Gert Strydom

Johannesburg, South Africa
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