Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#iipower
How distant my Swabian* youth seems now. I made a glider which really flew, you know.* Not far, but yes, it carried me! I soared!    Some accused me of being a showboat, of tooting my own horn. . . . I learned early that the laurels don't go to the meek or the bashful.    Yes, I was a **** Those aristocrats on the General Staff* belittled the Fuhrer-- but where had they gotten us? I liked his enthusiasm and optimism. We were in a hole; he led us out, got the economy going again, restored the Sudetenland and Danzig. (Danzig where Lucie and I had been married!)    I thought Poland would be the end but when we attacked in the West I didn't shrink away. My troops and I were the very spearhead: strike quickly; do the unexpected.    Who was I to deny Germany's world-wide destiny?    The African war agreed with me. The open space gave a latitude to my strategy lacking in hilly, forested Europe. The victory at Tobruk is often cited as the height of genius, military.   I, myself, prefer what preceded it: the retreat into Tripolitania-- salvaging men and tanks, shortening supply lines, lulling the British into complacency; turning and stinging at Agedabia. El Alamein: the Fuhrer and I part company. "Victory or Death", he cabled me. I disagreed: my men would not die senselessly. We were desperate for gasoline. Ship after ship was sunk trying to deliver it. (Lax Italian security, no doubt.)    We were outnumbered five to one. I favored withdrawing immediately, consolidating troops in Europe. The Fuhrer wouldn't hear of it.    I flew to East Prussia to confront him. He'd grown pudgier, more strident-- wouldn't give an inch. I sensed that not just Africa but the war as a whole would be lost. The weight of the forces against us was crushing. The only question'd been their willingness to fight. That had been answered at Stalingrad.    I fought on in Italy and in France, hoping to convince the enemy that the price of taking Europe-- especially Germany-- would be too high. I really thought we had a chance to stop them on the beaches. But now that we've failed, our destruction's inevitable.    I've tried to make the Fuhrer see reason: surrender to the British and Americans; don't let our country be overrun by Russia.    He condoned ****** ordered me to **** the French Jewish soldiers who'd surrendered at Bir Hacheim,* for instance, (I didn't) -- and much more. . . . And yet, and yet, I couldn't quite bring myself to wish him dead-- and certainly never took part in that plot-- though, yes, I knew of it . . . after a fashion. . . . Defending myself to that group would be hopeless. . . . Lucie and Manfred must be spared the humiliation of hearing me declared a traitor. I bestrode the plains of Africa-- Rommel, the invincible-- always with the troops where the battle was most critical. I was crafty and brave, dared to act when others shied away. I was the apple of the Fuhrer's eye; idol of the German people; scourge of the British military. All the world applauded me. I lost-- but only when outnumbered overwhelmingly.    Now I sit in the back of this Opel*-- an outcast, a criminal-- waiting to take a cyanide pill. We failed to assess properly the will of other nations to honor treaties and preserve their freedom. And, more basically: Were we right to force our rule on other people? Icarus-like, we flew too high. We were bold and strong but it seems, in the end, in the end, not supermen.
0
Aug 15, 2018
Aug 15, 2018 at 8:47 AM UTC
Herr Generalfeldmarschall Rommel Takes Cyanide
How distant my Swabian* youth seems now. I made a glider which really flew, you know.* Not far, but yes, it carried me! I soared!    Some accused me of being a showboat, of tooting my own horn. . . . I learned early that the laurels don't go to the meek or the bashful.    Yes, I was a **** Those aristocrats on the General Staff* belittled the Fuhrer-- but where had they gotten us? I liked his enthusiasm and optimism. We were in a hole; he led us out, got the economy going again, restored the Sudetenland and Danzig. (Danzig where Lucie and I had been married!)    I thought Poland would be the end but when we attacked in the West I didn't shrink away. My troops and I were the very spearhead: strike quickly; do the unexpected.    Who was I to deny Germany's world-wide destiny?    The African war agreed with me. The open space gave a latitude to my strategy lacking in hilly, forested Europe. The victory at Tobruk is often cited as the height of genius, military.   I, myself, prefer what preceded it: the retreat into Tripolitania-- salvaging men and tanks, shortening supply lines, lulling the British into complacency; turning and stinging at Agedabia. El Alamein: the Fuhrer and I part company. "Victory or Death", he cabled me. I disagreed: my men would not die senselessly. We were desperate for gasoline. Ship after ship was sunk trying to deliver it. (Lax Italian security, no doubt.)    We were outnumbered five to one. I favored withdrawing immediately, consolidating troops in Europe. The Fuhrer wouldn't hear of it.    I flew to East Prussia to confront him. He'd grown pudgier, more strident-- wouldn't give an inch. I sensed that not just Africa but the war as a whole would be lost. The weight of the forces against us was crushing. The only question'd been their willingness to fight. That had been answered at Stalingrad.    I fought on in Italy and in France, hoping to convince the enemy that the price of taking Europe-- especially Germany-- would be too high. I really thought we had a chance to stop them on the beaches. But now that we've failed, our destruction's inevitable.    I've tried to make the Fuhrer see reason: surrender to the British and Americans; don't let our country be overrun by Russia.    He condoned ****** ordered me to **** the French Jewish soldiers who'd surrendered at Bir Hacheim,* for instance, (I didn't) -- and much more. . . . And yet, and yet, I couldn't quite bring myself to wish him dead-- and certainly never took part in that plot-- though, yes, I knew of it . . . after a fashion. . . . Defending myself to that group would be hopeless. . . . Lucie and Manfred must be spared the humiliation of hearing me declared a traitor. I bestrode the plains of Africa-- Rommel, the invincible-- always with the troops where the battle was most critical. I was crafty and brave, dared to act when others shied away. I was the apple of the Fuhrer's eye; idol of the German people; scourge of the British military. All the world applauded me. I lost-- but only when outnumbered overwhelmingly.    Now I sit in the back of this Opel*-- an outcast, a criminal-- waiting to take a cyanide pill. We failed to assess properly the will of other nations to honor treaties and preserve their freedom. And, more basically: Were we right to force our rule on other people? Icarus-like, we flew too high. We were bold and strong but it seems, in the end, in the end, not supermen.
Continue reading...
92