MARMADUKE WAS MY SOBRIQUET
If Temujin could be Genghis Khan,
why not Milton Paul as Marmaduke
in the no-man’s land of South Ozone Queens.
Father said these were historic times,
suggesting I to keep a scrapbook
of the progress of the Great War in ’43.
Fast on my feet, I evaded spears and stones
hurled at me as I charged the Krauts on Anzio,
flinging sycamore itchy-ball hand grenades
into every portal of the enemy’s pillbox.
From my tree house bunker I barked
into my homemade walkie-talkie:
“Attack, Attack, Attack!”
We lined up the enemy in front of a firing squad
and took turns shooting my Daisy Rifle BB gun.
In the Flushing Meadows swamp,
redwing blackbirds eyed us suspiciously.
My binoculars followed Panzer divisions
as fire burned to prepare our flaming arrows:
dried cattails soaked in lighter fluid.
Mothers’ metal washboards, our suits of armor,
for shields, round wooden covers
scrounged from Mr. Hoffman’s vegetable store.
We fought every battle from the landing
in Sicily to the Normandy beachhead on D-Day
until we were called home for dinner.