Farewells and Welcome Homes | |
|
For you, it will truly be the
hardest thing
saying goodbye to those you dearly love
not knowing what tomorrow may bring...
tears of joy or horrors none dare think of.
But with hopes held high, you'll say goodbye
or better yet, farewell till you embrace again,
as hearts racing, the vast ocean and sky
bears them away... Destination: War Insane.
You'll tend the home front as best you can
and will brave the loneliness you're bound to feel
till they return home from that distant land
safe and sound, a dream nobody can steal.
Facing the perils of war, they'll think of you,
and feel grateful you are not where they are,
having to endure what they're going through,
knowing real peace is still a long shot by far.
Each one knows today might be the last
for any one of them who's sworn to remain
till their duties are done, or the die is cast
perhaps numbering them among the maimed.
But, whatever price they each will pay
for the sake of those hoping to live free,
you'll greet them on that most special day
with the Welcome Home they long to see.
You'll shake flags at their plane long before it lands
and shout and scream as their ship draws near,
a welcome every returning soldier understands,
epitomizing what a veteran's soul holds dear. |
By Nancy L. Meek
Copyright 2004 Listed February 24, 2010 |
|
|
About Author... Nancy is the proud wife of William "Billy" J. Meek, a Vietnam War
Veteran, who served with the 1st Cavalry Airmobile Division, 11th Aviation
Group, 228th Battalion, Co. B.
Nancy's website |
| It is illegal to use this poem without the author's permission. ~~ Send your comments and/or use permission request to
Nancy. ~~ |
Poem Use Permission Request
USA Patriotism! cannot
provide use permission for a poem or an author's email address
if not listed below the poem. Only the author or a legal
representative can grant permission. Try a search engine to find the
author's contact information for a use permission request or if
it is available for public use. Note: Poems authored in the
1700s and 1800s can be used with reference to the author. |
Comment on this poem |
| |
|
War and Tragedy Poems | Poem Categories |
|