Free-verse poem about visiting a grave as a young boy with Mommie (my grandmother). |
Every Saturday back in the 1950s when I was a young boy, I rode with Mommie (my grandmother) and my Uncle Homer to visit my Uncle Walter. I never knew him, only his grave. Mommie carried fresh flowers each visit. She would discard last week’s droopy blossoms, rinse out and refill the in-ground container with fresh water, and then lovingly arrange the new blooms. She always knelt in the grass beside his grave, even though she had arthritic knees. She’d linger awhile, then return to the car dabbing at her eyes with a handkerchief. I wondered why she cried week after week. Uncle Homer would wait somewhat impatiently in the car, fiddling with the radio and glancing at his watch. I explored the gravesites nearby, wandering farther afield with time. Mommie always lingered too long. On the trip home came the reason I accompanied them weekly. A small grocery store-filling station provided my reward – a RC cola, into which I added a package of Tom’s salted peanuts – a treat from Mommie. It made the wait worthwhile. When I asked Dad who my Uncle Walter was, he grew pensive, spoke slowly, “Walter was my best friend growing up. He was your mother’s and your Uncle Homer’s brother, Mommie’s son, and he was the best man I ever knew. He was Mommie’s favorite child. Everyone who knew him liked him. He would have had a great life.” I thought of the boxed picture of a young man in uniform, against the background of an American flag neatly positioned around it, proudly displayed on Mommie’s living room mantel – the only image I ever carried of my Uncle Walter. I remember asking, “What happened to him?” Dad replied, “World War II. World War II happened to him. He volunteered to go fight Hitler’s Nazis in order to preserve America’s freedom. He only made it to Bloody Omaha Beach on D-day. A mortar shell fell directly on him, blowing him apart. War takes the bravest, the best of a nation’s young men, robbing the world of their future contributions. Walter was one of those men.” I recall thinking it strange that Uncle Walter died at the beach. Then it occurred to me to ask, “If he was blown up, what’s buried in his grave?” Dad’s reply: “Nothing much but a lifetime of memories and the love of those who knew him.” I thought it odd that every Saturday we rode to the cemetery for Mommie to cry, kneeling beside an empty grave. Today I understand. Please check out my ten books: http://www.amazon.com/Jr.-Harry-E.-Gilleland/e/B004SVLY02/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0 |