Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Vietnam in Poetry

http://www.vietnamexp.com/Vietnam%20Poetry.html

"A web site that shares the emotional and spiritual experiences of the Vietnam War through poetry, stories, and photos by combat veterans."

There are a great number of poems on this site which are about the loss of friends and the missing soldiers. One particular poem (On losing friends by William Norman Janes, Sr.) had a note beforehand stating that the poem was not created out of pride but out of grief and how they felt shame when they lost people they cared about.
Another (Rock and Roll Warriors by Dr. Jerry Komar) comments on the stress and the after effects that Vietnam had on those who managed to survive. They would often turn to "smack and Jack" because they couldn't handle the flashbacks and memories. "nightmares of fallen heroes, their time warp dance began. Living here, but being there." Dinosaur by Keith Bodine is another of many which concentrate on the difficulty of leaving Nam behind. "I am a dinosaur in a modern world, Looking for something I can’t unfurl. I’m ready to go and enter "That Door", Then maybe my mind will be at ease once more."

There was one poem which stood out more than the rest, entitled "There is one patrol still out" by Frank. J. Montoya. It comments on those who were missing in action or captured and how it wasn't even known as to why they were in this war and what they were fighting for.

A Squad on a mission to search and destroy.

A Bomber Crew making a run to Hanoi.

A Gunner on the Mekong in a gunboat of steel.

A Green Beret, a Medic, a Navy SEAL.

A Marine on a hillside at the Siege of Khe Sanh.

A Chopper Crew at a landing zone...the list goes on.

They went forth to do battle and stayed where they fell.

Or spent their last desperate days in a dark prison cell.

They were called on to serve in that strange distant land

For reasons some of them never did quite understand.


The support and respect they would need to pull through

Came too little, too late, and was expressed by too few.

It's so sad there were many like these left behind.

Although no longer with us, they are still on our mind.

Each one is a hero, every brave, valiant soul.

For these are the members of THE LAST PATROL.

Their spirits cry out in anguish: "Why can't WE return home?"

As through the jungles and highlands they restlessly roam.

They haunt the rubber plantations, the rice paddies too,

The streets of Saigon, the Delta, all those places they knew;

Like the Ton Son Nhut Airfield, R & R at Vung Tau,

The Repple Depot at Long Binh....just vague memories now.

A flag with a Silhouette honors the POW, the MIA.

And we search for them still, even up to this day.

What's the number of bracelets that many people yet wear,

Bearing names of our warriors that we left over there?

Will they ever return? No... Not likely, not now.

But their loved ones still hope that maybe, someday, somehow,

A discovery could close this sad chapter of life,

And bring peace to parents, a sibling, a child or a wife.

If as a Nation, we could say: "You did not die in vain.

We gratefully honor your sacrifice, your courage and pain".

Perhaps, then those sad souls could rest,
no more have to roam,

And our LAST PATROL, in spirit,
could finally be welcomed home.





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