It is an era that need be forgotten, yet not be forgotten Isolated by the rest of humanity for forsaking humanity, The lives of no mere mortals were sacrificed on the promise of freedom, While in some town couped up by hate, anger and despair Families were left an unsolvable puzzle, in infinite pieces It was an era that they told us was over, And yet in a trench somewhere near the tip of a continent Men whose bodies are covered by a dark pigment no different from mine, Different to that of the man commanding them to dig deeper, Whose behaviour and attitude seems no different to that of his father, And his father, and his fatherβs father, and their forefathers On whose behest a mark on a people was heavily branded A sense of nostalgia overwhelms my body And so while I walk past these men working in the trenches I look upon them with a face contorted by disgust Not toward them nor the pale skinned man who dictates their every movement It is towards those of the same pigment as the men in these very trenches Whose stomachs have been fattened by the labour of these very men Whose every lie they have forced them to believe With the talk of an era that still instills fear and instigates hate Misdirected towards still figures who have as much life in them as the men they honour It is an era that is still not yet over