Better To Die At Home

Michael Varga
July 15, 2025

A poem for Ukraine

You have to die anyway. It’s better to die at home.
—Hanna Petrivna, in Ukraine March 4, 2022.

So many owner-less animals,
They forage among broken bricks.
Were they soldiers’ pets at the base?
Are those troops still fighting or laid
Up in a hospital where doctors fix
Bones or are they already decayed?
              Poland is tempting to some.
“I am old, unwilling, to flee westward.
Let the children find new lives. It is my
Winter, let a missile strike me, okay,
Let me take a Russian to hell with me.”

Windows boarded up, wind whips through
Anyway. A worn coat zipped to my neck.
Under a torn sleeve a purple bruise swells.
“Sometimes you have to become a check,
On evil proliferating, swamping valleys
Where rivers used to flow below snow
Dropping from distant heaven. God!
                  Are you with us or them?
Since they kill like a devil—cruel, inflicting
Maximum pain—I know we are persecuted
Just like the divine, just like any innocent.
Let me die as one shepherd to pets
Crying for their masters—disappeared
By Russky troops bleeding us to death.”

This poem was included in the Support Ukraine anthology, published in May 2025 by Moonstone Press (www.moonstoneartscenter.com) 110A South 13th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107


Share

Recent Posts


Featured image for “Better To Die At Home”
July 15, 2025

Better To Die At Home

So many owner-less animals, They forage among broken bricks. Were they soldiers’ pets at the base? Are those troops still fighting or laid...


Featured image for “What My Albatross Steals”
April 8, 2025

What My Albatross Steals

Storms are a delight for my albatross. This diver sails giddy on gusts, soaring over volcanoes Threatening to erupt, unspooling lava fields That...