Not quite in the same league as the poems already mentioned I came across this researching an english assignment back when I was in school.
16 years old when I went to war,
To fight for a land fit for heroes,
God on my side,and a gun in my hand,
Counting my days down to zero,
And I marched and I fought and I bled And I died
I never did get any older,
But I knew at the time, That a year in the line,
Is a long enough life for a soldier,
We all volunteered,
And we wrote down our names,
And we added two years to our ages,
Eager for life and ahead of the game,
Ready for history's pages,
And we fought and we brawled
And we whored 'til we stood,
Ten thousand shoulder to shoulder,
A thirst for the Hun,
We were food for the gun,and that's
What you are when you're soldiers,
I heard my friend cry,
And he sank to his knees,coughing blood
As he screamed for his mother
And I tell by his side,
And that's how we died,
Clinging like kids to each other,
And I lay in the mud and the guts and the blood,
And I wept as his body grew colder,
And I called for my mother, but she never came,
Though it wasn't my fault, I wasn't to blame,
The day not half over
And ten thousand slain,and now
There's nobody remembers our names
And that's how it is for a soldier.
I only discovered that my father was at Dunkerque after his death... he wouldn't speak about it at all...
My grandfather was a POW held by the Japanese and he never talked about it to anyone. I think that experiences like these are impossible to convey to anyone who hasnt gone through something similar themselves. There is no frame of reference.