The Dugout Near Avdiivka
- Matthew Parish
- 7 minutes ago
- 1 min read

By Matthew Parish
The frost creeps through the timbered trench at dawn,
Each breath a ghost that shivers in the shell-scarred air;
Men cough in whispers, huddled, pale and worn,
Their faces smudged with soot and hopeless care.
The drones hum low — metallic seraphs overhead,
Their song a dirge that chills the marrow’s core;
And where they pass, the sleeping join the dead,
Their peace restored, though bought through hell’s own door.
A boy lies still, his rifle in his hands,
The frost has kissed his lashes into glass;
He dreamt of fields beyond these blasted lands,
Now poppies bloom where mortars used to pass.
The earth here stinks of iron, oil, and pain,
Of men unburied, broken, half-forgot;
And all the sky, once blue, weeps sleet like rain —
A mercy, maybe — heaven’s tears for rot.
O Lord, make sense of this unending crime,
Where faith is lost, and mercy gone astray;
For still they fight, in mud, in blood, in time —
And still the dawn looks just like yesterday.

