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View ProfilesPublished November 11, 2020 at 10:00 a.m.
I was a simple soldier called to fight in an ordinary war
My buddy Dana went to Toronto but I answered the call
I didn't know then that you didn't have to have your leg blowed off to come back wounded
Son of a bitch, what happened over there? I still don't know and I'm running out of time
The war was raging and in the States there were cops in the streets making sure that everybody stepped the right way
They were electing a president and the way things looked was more important than the way things were
The guys without the billy clubs had blood on their faces but were talking calmly and making the most sense
The night before I left I can still hear my dear mother crying as the door closed behind me on the old homestead in Vermont
I can still see the tears of my sweet darlin' shooting straight out before they trickled down her cheeks the next morning as she
came to see my bus drive off. My last glimpse she was sitting on the sidewalk crying her eyes out as people rushed up to her
I left my bride and took a ride on a Greyhound headed south with a bunch of scared kids
In our hearts we all knew we were going to die in some jungle in a far away country we never heard of until a
couple of weeks before.
Sixteen hours later I was sworn in and on government soil when I saw my first fighting
Two guys that had never been introduced but were certain they couldn't stand each other and it was the opposite's fault
tried to settle the Civil War once and for all
But it was a 100 years too late, some issue or another about skin color
I was in the mix at mighty Fort Dix and that's the way it started
Those nice gentlemen in charge taught me the spirit of the bayonet was to kill and how to throw a hand grenade just right
Five months later I was ready to go do what I was brought there to do
I couldn't spell that foreign land or pronounce that foreign land the same way two times in a row
But I knew neither was required to die in that foreign land
Plans changed and they sent me to old Koree 'cause the current dictator was acting up
The sergeant gave me 200 rounds of ammo and told me to shoot anyone that didn't look like me
I says "Sarge what happens if the bullets run out but the 'not me's' didn't?"
He says "Come see me for further instructions" and laughed hysterically as he turned and walked away
The North Koreans and the Chinese never came down, I don't believe it was for humanitarian reasons either
I never had to shoot anyone but a few times I had to look real stern and scare 'em
On the flight back they said we were just there to be a deterrent anyway
Right near the end my mind went and I started feeling ways I didn't know I could feel, none of which were good
Sarge says "Don't worry, it's just stress, you'll be alright when you get home"
The problem was I never got home. Oh sure I made it back to my native locale and the house was still there but the home was gone
Growing up all the men in my neighborhood had been to World War II, most fought in Europe, the rest in the Pacific
They all drank beer, smoked cigarettes, worked all the time and didn't talk much
When they smiled their expressions revealed that somewhere along the way they had the juice squeezed out of them
Like one of the limes at a cocktail party that they didn't get to go to celebrating the end of the war
As a boy I used to think that was the way men were. Only after I came back did I realize that no,
that's the way men were that had been to war and seen too much.
They all rest in peace now in a final formation in the churchyard on Chapel Hill
It's fifty years later and I'm still looking for home. Maybe that's it over there through the mist
Prayer and loving better than I used to have allowed me to get this far, but it ain't home
Let's see where it takes me from here
The original print version of this article was headlined "Still Looking for Home | Dedicated to Ellen"
Tags: Poetry, Veterans Day, U.S. army, armed service
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