Behind me few followed, and before me my smiling enemy.
I will not be the first to depart, I will not be the last to bleed;
Many shall have to die, before I have a man dead inside me.
Archers welcome my charge, their strings tight and taut too;
The arrows shall pierce armours, and we’re lesser suddenly.
Another volley is prepared, strings pulled and arrows put to;
But not before I break the ranks, with a man dead inside me.
They can’t shoot arrows at a man standing amidst them, no;
Not that they shouldn’t try, but my steed shall never still be.
My mare run, my sword sweep, my enemy’s blood to flow;
I would not cease now, and neither the man dead inside me.
The pike and javelin advances, they seem to cheerfully nod;
In wild thrusts and stabs, they expected to find their victory.
A spear looks me in the eye, then throws full might that rod;
But his is not the claim to make, to that man dead inside me.
The infantry came out to greet us, we exchange pleasantries;
Each man would call out to his god, his flag, and his family.
And then comes the onslaught, the collision of these armies;
I close my eyes momentarily, to see the man dead inside me.
There he stands in the distance, his armour shining so bright;
A blade in the scabbard, with another right through his body.
I suppose I should know now, that this shall be my last fight;
And I opened my eyes, but I still see the man dead inside me.
My army withers away, and my men have breathed their last;
I stand alone with the enemy, and their swords crying hungry.
Kill me now, I wish to tell these men, but do not kill me fast;
And in the slow strokes of steel, I have a man dead inside me.
By:
Sarthak Prakash