A photo essay on some other brave souls: the dogs of warMemorial Day - It's not a barbecue, some beer, a car race or a post party hangover. It's a solemn day in which we remember those of courage who gave their all for something they believed in. Those that served their country and paid the ultimate sacrifice.
Remember them.
That last thing I saw was the a sliver of winter sky through a haze of gunpowder.
The last thing I heard was the report of fire, one last wild spurring of colors made sound, then silence.
The last thing I felt was an intake of breath, air drawing deep into me. I don't remember the exhale. I thought nothing could reach me. I never knew what hit me.
I'll be all right in a minute, I said, but nothing came out.
I'm looking down on my still form, thinking I must have a concussion, for the vision could not be real. I close my eyes and recite the steps to field strip my AR in the field. "bolt fully forward", "remove the bolt carrier and the charging handle", open my eyes.
But the vision didn't change.

They sent me home in a box, draped with a flag, in a suit I had never worn. It was hot, the corn in fervent zeal, bowing before the behemoth combines that would pull it into an oblivious end. There was a line of cars as long as main street, headlights on yet diminished by the suns uncaring heat. They rolled slowly along until the cemetery was reached, the sound of taps drifting up to the heavens where they were only an echo.
But sometimes an echo is heard.
My name was spoken reverently, a soft word that drowned out the protestors that know not what faith and duty really mean.
The cemetery is vacant, the community at home. My wife sits with a letter, the paper , worn from touch, her last contact, the writing ashen and fine and almost intelligible. She reads it with restless tension and with every last memory, taking what comfort she can out of the words, so that she will know that my love was true, my sacrifice worthy. She reads and reads, my words to her gathering around her. The more she reads, the less she sees, as the writing becomes fainter, words wet with tears, until the paper itself crumbles away, and nothing is left to her but dust and the future she carries within her.
The cemetery is old now, my grave now surrounded by others, so many years, so many funerals. My eyes live on in a child I never met. My name lives on, on a piece of granite in a place forever solemn, in a picture, in a flag.
I am everywhere, in memorial. In a tombstone, in the sound of fire, in the flag I hope you salute more than once a year. We are all a memory that begins and ends with what is left, stakes in the hard ground on which to peg our history.
When the last thing you see is that small sliver of freedom still there in the sky, remember me. I am a soldier, I am everywhere, in the trees, in the wind, under your feet in a land that's still free.
I am a soldier. I am unknown but remembered always.
Brigid
Remember them.
That last thing I saw was the a sliver of winter sky through a haze of gunpowder.
The last thing I heard was the report of fire, one last wild spurring of colors made sound, then silence.
The last thing I felt was an intake of breath, air drawing deep into me. I don't remember the exhale. I thought nothing could reach me. I never knew what hit me.
I'll be all right in a minute, I said, but nothing came out.
I'm looking down on my still form, thinking I must have a concussion, for the vision could not be real. I close my eyes and recite the steps to field strip my AR in the field. "bolt fully forward", "remove the bolt carrier and the charging handle", open my eyes.
But the vision didn't change.
They sent me home in a box, draped with a flag, in a suit I had never worn. It was hot, the corn in fervent zeal, bowing before the behemoth combines that would pull it into an oblivious end. There was a line of cars as long as main street, headlights on yet diminished by the suns uncaring heat. They rolled slowly along until the cemetery was reached, the sound of taps drifting up to the heavens where they were only an echo.
But sometimes an echo is heard.
My name was spoken reverently, a soft word that drowned out the protestors that know not what faith and duty really mean.
The cemetery is vacant, the community at home. My wife sits with a letter, the paper , worn from touch, her last contact, the writing ashen and fine and almost intelligible. She reads it with restless tension and with every last memory, taking what comfort she can out of the words, so that she will know that my love was true, my sacrifice worthy. She reads and reads, my words to her gathering around her. The more she reads, the less she sees, as the writing becomes fainter, words wet with tears, until the paper itself crumbles away, and nothing is left to her but dust and the future she carries within her.
The cemetery is old now, my grave now surrounded by others, so many years, so many funerals. My eyes live on in a child I never met. My name lives on, on a piece of granite in a place forever solemn, in a picture, in a flag.
I am everywhere, in memorial. In a tombstone, in the sound of fire, in the flag I hope you salute more than once a year. We are all a memory that begins and ends with what is left, stakes in the hard ground on which to peg our history.When the last thing you see is that small sliver of freedom still there in the sky, remember me. I am a soldier, I am everywhere, in the trees, in the wind, under your feet in a land that's still free.
I am a soldier. I am unknown but remembered always.
Brigid
29 comments:
I wish I could express myself as well as you. The poetry is in your soul and the muse sits on your shoulder
Q
May we never forget. Never.
Haunting. I think I'll compile some of my favorite patriotic country songs and do a blog post of them Monday.
Amen.
Your writing is simply amazing.
Thank you.
gfa
J. - thanks for the heads up on blogger. It's been acting funky the last few weeks and I was getting an error code when I tried to log in this evening. I logged out and in and it seems to be working better.
Well said.
Amen and thank you for posting this.
Great stuff!!
I can't say it nearly as well as I would like, so I try to acknowledge when others say with eloquence what I wish I could say.
Thank You Bridget.
Others who have said it well:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RzQ5KhHado
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ervaMPt4Ha0&feature=related
Thank you for this. You have great talent. Nothing I tried to write could quite capture the importance of this day. This makes it real.
I'll just link to yours.
Not a problem on the heads up, anytime.
Your writing is breath taking as always.
And, for all those who can't say it anymore, I want to say thank you.
Josh
Thank you for your service, and for your inspiring words!
Brigid,
Sleep well. May wee all sleep well with brave men and women standing guard.
I am heading for bed with a tear in my eye..and a deep sense of gratitude.
May we never forget. AMEN.
Well said.
Well said.
Your writing brought a tear to the eyes.
Lady, You were doing just fine until your mention of the UGs. I still haven't gotten used to those money hungry cowards!
Otherwise- ya dun good.
I'm not ashamed to admit I couldn't get through this post without tears in my eyes. You stated it so eloquently.
I can't add anything. You said it all.
What a terrific post. And, I just love the image at the top. That's my kinda guy. :)
Thank you for sharing, B.
Eloquent and powerful words. Well done, as always . . .
Thank you, Brigid.
My litany for tomorrow consists of those who served and died; those who served and sacrificed their youth, their sanity and /or limbs, organs and a future as beings whole and ready to make a way in this rugged land.
William "Woody" Martin, U.S.Navy
- Aaron Boggs "Bob" Anthony, Army Air Corp
- William Henry Ripley, Army Air Corp
- Carl Wallace Lundquist, Marine Corp
- William Henry Simmons, Marine Corp
- Clayton Charles "Chuck" Kemp, U.S. Navy
- Donald "Duff" Yarrington, U.S Army
Amen.
For my Grandfather's brother, whom I never met - who died in Europe, fighting the Nazi War Machine.
Well said Brigid.
Well said, Well read~~ Thank you
A Great piece. I only got about half way thru before it all became a blur.
A thank you from my uncle Everett Russell Feeney, a B-17 pilot over Germany who made the trip 37 & 1/2 times.
Thanks again
I'm at work, blinking away a tear. God Bless....
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