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Something dastardly caught my eye and broke my heart this week. A small article of news claiming that 68 children were killed in the Holy Land in the eleven days of fighting between the two ancient foes. As we observe our Memorial Day weekend in which we honor the memory of our soldiers killed in combat, why can’t we also honor the memory of all the children who were innocent victims of all wars. Maybe establish international monuments, like the Tomb of the Unknown Children.

We might even consider honoring all those killed in all the wars ever by figuring out the source and a way to end them. A war on wars perhaps. Maybe a poet can shed some light here. Fifty years ago South African Kendrew Lascelles composed The Box, which aired on the Smothers Brothers Show in summer of 1971, and later recited by John Denver on his Poems, Prayers, and Promises album. Let me encourage us to read this poem out loud and listen to it as if it were both a prayer and a promise to all the children of the world.

Once upon a time, in the land of Hush-A-Bye,
Around about the wondrous days of yore,
They came across a kind of box
Bound up with chains and locked with locks
And labeled “Kindly do not touch; it’s war.”
A decree was issued round about, and all with a flourish and a shout
And a gaily colored mascot tripping lightly on before.
Don’t fiddle with this deadly box, Or break the chains, or pick the locks.
And please don’t ever play about with war.
The children understood. Children happen to be good
And they were just as good around the time of yore.
They didn’t try to pick the locks Or break into that deadly box.
They never tried to play about with war.
Mommies didn’t either; sisters, aunts, grannies neither
‘Cause they were quiet, and sweet, and pretty
In those wondrous days of yore.
Well, very much the same as now,
And not the ones to blame somehow
For opening up that deadly box of war.
But someone did. Someone battered in the lid
And spilled the insides out across the floor.
A kind of bouncy, bumpy ball made up of guns and flags
And all the tears, and horror, and death that comes with war.
It bounced right out and went bashing all about,
Bumping into everything in store. And what was sad and most unfair
Was that it didn’t really seem to care
Much who it bumped, or why, or what, or for.
It bumped the children mainly. And I’ll tell you this quite plainly,
It bumps them every day and more, and more,
And leaves them dead, and burned, and dying
Thousands of them sick and crying.
‘Cause when it bumps, it’s really very sore.
Now there’s a way to stop the ball. It isn’t difficult at all.
All it takes is wisdom, and I’m absolutely sure
That we can get it back into the box, And bind the chains, and lock the locks.
But no one seems to want to save the children anymore.
Well, that’s the way it all appears, ’cause it’s been bouncing round
for years and years
In spite of all the wisdom wizzed since those wondrous days of yore
And the time they came across the box,
Bound up with chains and locked with locks,
And labeled “Kindly do not touch; it’s war.”

3 Replies to “Tomb of the Unknown Children”

  1. Oh Dudley,
    I had forgotten about this poem, I think I remember you read it to the “Church” many years ago. I even remember it from the Smothers Brothers Show. How words can bring us to new insights, lift or crush our spirits. On this Memorial Day weekend, I am recalling my uncles who came home from war. One went insane in North Africa, fighting Rommel, and one who was in the first wave of Marines landing on Iwo Jima in the Pacific. Some how they both survived, but one was a badly broken man.
    On this weekend may we remember those who paid the ultimate sacrifice for peace, and what a precious thing it is. God bless us with more peace.

  2. Thanks for the poem. I would vote for your idea on unknown children..

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