And in the morning I awoke, sleep wearied and bloated by experience, to find all just as it had been but nothing the same...
The pale cast of nihilism hung limp over the morning's hillside where an inconspicuous mist had once resided.
Bless my mother's innocent attempt to patch up my Mind's muddied terror with a strong tea in her best china by the bedside.
My boyhood mattress began a demented laughing in the face of brothers with graves for beds as I was, once again, swamped with guilty memory of the unheroic dead.
Those gentle youth with minds full of the names of wild flowers and the rules of garden cricket wrenched from the safe musk of mothers to the mud and shrill choir of the shells.
The Air she would weep for the loss of another pair of lungs she'd never inhabit again. All the while, the Earth rejoiced at the return of her creation.
That clay that once grew tall. Outwards from the rib. All for some fantasy and trick of the flame.
Inspired by the haunting poetry of Owen and Sassoon and infused with imagery from Shakespeare's "Hamlet" to communicate the sense of an impossible and futile task resting on the young shoulders of WWI soldiers.