A MIA-POW bracelet passed down from mom to child. Find out what became of the soldier. |
The Bracelet 1971 The bracelet she wore A symbol of absence The hope of return Of a man she never met A husband of her own A baby on the way Watching the news Draft dates and death Dreading both She stares at the bracelet Pretty soon she’d have another A baby due in September 1991 Wearing the bracelet her mother wore A symbol of absence Losing hope of return Of a man she’ll never meet Just 20, no child, no husband, Sitting in the college cafeteria Watching the news, no draft calls But another war just the same She wondered about the family of Barton Creed, Lost in March 1971 Were his kids watching, remembering A man they’ll never know? 2001 Towers Fall, Another war on the brink Pregnant with child, the third generation A bracelet in safekeeping, cracked and taped But never forgotten, the man she never knew. 2008 Trying on the bracelet found in the keepsake box The boy asks about the name, a crack running through the C A symbol of broken dreams, unresolved grief For a man with grandchildren he’ll never meet. SWPoet 36 Lines Check out these two sites to see what happened to Barton S. Creed, Lost in Laos, Cambodia in March 1971 and read the letter his wife wrote regarding his two children and four grandchildren. His son is currently serving his country in 2008 and is alive and well. His daughter also served her country after graduating from the Naval Academy in Annapolis. http://www.virtualwall.org/dc/CreedBS01a.htm http://www.pownetwork.org/bios/c/c116.htm **************************************************** Revised version above due to requirement of 40 lines for a contest. I've kept the earlier version to show how revision can occur (for poetry class). The Bracelet: A new generation My mother had a bracelet she passed down There was a name and date etched there Six months before my date of birth Not too long after yours. Your father, still missing from Vietnam March 31, 1971. Lost in Laos, Cambodia And a mother with three children No father for her son, no father to bury and mourn September 1971, my mother greets her newborn daughter, Hospital bracelet on one wrist, your father’s on another March 1991, another generation’s war I’m a college student wearing my mother’s bracelet Watching my generation’s war in the desert Mindlessly twisting the bracelet, I wondering if he was ever found. I noticed the crack in the C of your daddy’s last name. November 2001, I held my firstborn son Another war brewing, towers down, planes of fire Back in the desert again, mothers, fathers, daughters and sons. More bracelets to pass down through another generation Like the one gently placed in a keepsake box, tape around the crack. Not long ago, I showed my son the old silver bracelet With the name Barton S. Creed 3-31-71 etched across the surface I told him his grandmother and I wore this to remember A man we never knew, a man who never came back. Or did he? I tucked my child in and kissed him good night, eagerly wanting to find out. Late that night, in 2008, I scrolled through messages about the soldier And found the same thing written, again and again. Tears fell from my eyes. “My mother wore the bracelet, I wore it too. I would pass it to my child, But there’s a crack through the C.” I held her mother’s bracelet, my bracelet, Rubbing my hand over the tape I placed there 15 years before. I read further, the messages from friends and family, Tributes from his high school in Peekskill, NY, a world away, and yet. Other accounts from fellow soldiers recount the last day, they saw him alive, watching as the chopper was unable to rescue him. They think he lived, for a short while. When they returned, he was gone. There was letter from his wife that says he never came home. She also said he left two daughters and an infant son Who is now fighting in his own generation’s war. So I looked him up, and found him here and there. Tall, dignified, proud, receiving honors and promotions, serving like his dad. I wondered about my own boy, full of confidence and adventure. If he were to serve, which would win-pride or fear. I thought I knew which. I knew I didn't want anyone wearing his bracelet someday. I also knew, I admired his mother, his grandmother, for their contribution. A son is huge price to pay for freedom and for America. As I read about you, the son of a soldier, I have to admit I breathed a sigh of relief As I read that you came home safely from your tour, And are now stateside, teaching other soldiers, Other mothers and fathers, how to stay alive in combat. And though I never met your dad, I have feeling he would be mighty proud of you. Your dad’s bracelet remains in my keepsake box, but his name remains in my heart along with another. The son of Barton S. Creed, a soldier. SWPoet I found a website that tells you what became of the Vietnam Vets missing in action who had these bands in their names but you can also purchase these bands with names from other wars, including the current one. http://www.virtualwall.org/dc/CreedBS01a.htm http://www.pownetwork.org/bios/c/c116.htm Reviewers: I know, as a poem, it needs a lot of work and I will be working on it more. However, I wanted to get the story and the sentiment across first. Any suggestions are welcome, though. |