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Author Topic: Memorial Day  (Read 13970 times)

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TopNotch

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Memorial Day
« on: May 25, 2020, 03:08:57 pm »
My gardenia reached full blossom today. Seems like an appropriate time for white blossoms.

The more complex the mind, the greater the need for the simplicity of play.

Fierofool

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Re: Memorial Day
« Reply #1 on: May 25, 2020, 07:39:15 pm »
The Gardenia I planted from Melanie's funeral got cut down last week by my brother as he weeded around the house. 
There are three kinds of men:

1.    The ones that learn by reading.
2.    The few who learn by observation.
3.    The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and find out for themselves.    Will Rogers

Fierofool

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Re: Memorial Day
« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2020, 07:40:55 pm »
Here's a poem written by a member of a local forum I'm on.  By Tony Radford of the Dacula/Auburn area.

Tony Radford
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,

Friendly Fire

A local boy was cutting grass one Sunday afternoon,
amidst the granite markers and the shrubs still left to prune.

And as he wove his way around the obstacles at hand,
he saw a fellow kneeling on a patch of harrowed land.

The man was bent and crying as he leaned against the stone
conversing with a spirit – like he wasn’t there alone.

‘Twas clear he’d been a soldier by the patches on his shirt
and the artificial leg beneath him, nestled in the dirt.

With all the brash and innocence that kids that age possess,
he walked up to the soldier with condolement to express.

But as the boy drew closer, he could see that on the stone
was not a human’s image, but a dog he must have owned.

Below, he’d propped a picture of a puppy’s silhouette –
a mutt he’d found on foreign ground, abused and soaking wet.

The soldier wiped his tears away and raised his hand to greet,
then tried to gain composure as he struggled to his feet.

While shaking hands, he wondered why a dog was buried here
in a garden meant for people – to the boy, it wasn’t clear.

Was then he asked what took his life – what caused him to expire,
the soldier stood and bowed his head, “he died from friendly fire”.

The soldier sauntered over to bench not far away
and the lad sat down beside him, so the man could have his say.

He told a warrior’s story of a soldier far from home
in a setting rife with danger – hostile towns he had to comb.

“From care and special training for this puppy that I’d found,
emerged a special soldier who would keep me safe and sound.

He paved the way in battle, seeking things that might explode,
like an IED I couldn’t see – in a hole beside the road.

On nights that found us sleeping underneath an open sky,
he’d be right there to give me warmth and to keep a watchful eye.

We braved a few deployments to that God-forsaken land,
but civilian life together didn’t turn out like we’d planned.

I watched his vigor dwindle and his youthful spirit fade –
his pain from natural causes, while his body would degrade.

His love for life had ended, it was time to set him free,
so I picked a date to reciprocate for the things he’d done for me.

My friend had saved me more than once – he protected me from harm,
and I watched him take his final breath as I held him in my arms.”

And on that note, he stood up straight and snapped a crisp salute,
then he folded up that picture and he tucked it in his boot.

The boy was so inspired by what the soldier had to say,
that he made the man a promise just before he walked away.

From that day on, that special plot would get some extra care,
the vase adorned with flowers and no chance of disrepair.

That grave beheld a story that he couldn’t help admire,
a man’s best friend to the very end – who died from friendly fire.

Tony Radford
There are three kinds of men:

1.    The ones that learn by reading.
2.    The few who learn by observation.
3.    The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and find out for themselves.    Will Rogers

GTRS Fiero

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Re: Memorial Day
« Reply #3 on: May 30, 2021, 07:36:53 pm »
A big yhanks to all who died while serving this country.