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Remains by Simon Armitage - AQAThe poem

Remains is focused on a soldier haunted by a violent memory. Content, ideas, language and structure are explored. Comparisons and alternative interpretations are also considered.

Part of English LiteraturePoems

The poem

Remains
by Simon Armitage

On another occasion, we got sent out
to tackle looters raiding a bank.
And one of them legs it up the road,
probably armed, possibly not.

Well myself and somebody else and somebody else
are all of the same mind,
so all three of us open fire.
Three of a kind all letting fly, and I swear

I see every round as it rips through his life 鈥
I see broad daylight on the other side.
So we鈥檝e hit this looter a dozen times
and he鈥檚 there on the ground, sort of inside out,

pain itself, the image of agony.
One of my mates goes by
and tosses his guts back into his body.
Then he鈥檚 carted off in the back of a lorry.

End of story, except not really.
His blood-shadow stays on the street, and out on patrol
I walk right over it week after week.
Then I鈥檓 home on leave. But I blink

and he bursts again through the doors of the bank.
Sleep, and he鈥檚 probably armed, and possibly not.
Dream, and he鈥檚 torn apart by a dozen rounds.
And the drink and the drugs won鈥檛 flush him out 鈥

he鈥檚 here in my head when I close my eyes,
dug in behind enemy lines,
not left for dead in some distant, sun-stunned, sand-smothered land
or six-feet-under in desert sand,

but near to the knuckle, here and now,
his bloody life in my bloody hands.

Remains by Simon Armitage, reprinted by permission of Pomona Books.

Note: this poem is included for reference purposes, please refer to your anthology for the definitive version.