He's a little taller now... |
Picture it six feet square. On a red Background. |
He's a little taller now... |
Picture it six feet square. On a red Background. |
Don't let the outside fool you . . . |
"I have a baguette and I know how to use it!" |
My Mom.
She of the wicked pen . . .
and wonderful cooking.
I wish I'd found this for Mother's day a few weeks ago. But it's wonderful no matter when I share it!
This is 'verse' written by my mother so many, many years ago.
The peace and freedoms we enjoy come
to us at great cost,
Paid by precious few who did not shirk
when lives were lost.
But the sacrifice wasn’t solely given by those who went and fought,
But also by those left behind, who by
the heart were caught.
Now Bernard was my Dad’s best friend, the
brains behind the pranks,
That boy that other boys all love, but
parents don’t give thanks,
An independent sort of boy; his father
didn’t ‘get’,
They quarreled over something and the boy
left home upset,
Though just 16, he went to the recruitment
place downtown,
Put two years upon his age, swore not
to let them down,
His dad, when he discovered it, went
to bring him home,
The boy was underage, he’d tell him, ‘Never
will you roam!’
But on the way, he thought about the
wild boy, his young son.
And that the army surely’d do what Dad
could not get done,
And so he turned around and left his
boy there at the camp,
Thinking army life would make a man out
of his scamp.
Bernard went through basic; he was in
his element,
Mixed well with the men and did the
work that he was sent,
Finally, Dad’s friend was shipped
right to the battlefront,
Prepared to face the enemy with all
the other ‘grunts’,
Lacking heed, he charged in like he’d always
done so far,
But this was not the schoolyard, no.
This was different: WAR!
Bernard had served for just three days
when he paid the final price,
Dying in a soggy field of vegetables
and rice.
His father never did recover, mourned
from that day on,
Thinking, if he’d just gone on, he
could have saved his son,
He blamed himself for failing to retrieve
his teenage boy,
The tragedy went both ways, ever
robbing all of joy.
On this Memorial Day, let’s honour all
who blow the horn,
But let us not forget their loved ones, who forever mourn.
Photo Credit: Karen of bakinginatornado.com |