The March of the Dead
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    Marine Free Member Wrench3516's Avatar
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    The March of the Dead



    The March of the Dead
    by Col. Ed Danowitz, USMC (ret)

    About the black and marble wall
    they mustered in one last roll call,
    and as each name was nobly read
    in voice heard only by the dead,
    each one in proud response confirmed
    that they were there in honor earned,
    yet still prepared to fill such task
    as comrades might of each one ask.

    But, could the living dare implore
    those sacred dead to serve once more?
    To form again and march in ranks
    in place of those who heard no thanks,
    who fought the war, who stood in place,
    yet on return met but disgrace,
    who heard each curse, who took the blame
    for those who caused a nations shame.

    Was it not right for those who served
    to seek respect as each deserved?
    Yet such respect could but befall
    from those whose names engraved the wall.
    So each agreed to honor yield
    to those who lived with wounds unhealed,
    to march for each, to ease the pain,
    for each a hero's tribute gain.

    Then with the call..."Form for review!"
    Each from the wall their name withdrew
    to leave it somber, lonely, bare,
    protected still by God's own care,
    The parade was formed, the march course set,
    now all the fallen once more met,
    in proud reunion, to march with pride
    in silent, metered, saintly stride.
    Those souls, from human bond set free
    moved with immortal dignity
    as shadows O'er each throng filled street
    paced by a drummer's solemn beat,
    but mortal eyes could not behold
    those marching, as marched saints of old,
    and only could those with due's paid
    bear witness to this last parade.

    In admiration heroes rose,
    from battles past, against old foe's,
    from Valley Forge and Bunker Hill,
    Gettysburg, and Chancellorsville.
    Washington, Jackson, Grant, and Lee
    reviewed the march with solemnity.
    and those who held the Alamo
    joined men who bled in white French snow,
    at Soissons, Marne, and Belleau Wood.
    Thus Crockett and Pershing together stood.
    .....And the parade passed on.

    Pearl Harbor's heroes to a man
    rose with all those who fought Japan
    at Guadacanal, Siapan, the Philippines
    with MacArthur and the brave marines
    who raised the flag on Iwo's sand
    to mark the corps determined stand.
    Wainwright was joined by hundreds more
    forced from Bataan, Corregidor,
    to march ignoble, fraught with pain
    to die when strength dared not remain.
    .....And the dead marched on.

    Now Eisenhower with a soldier's pride
    viewed the parade, while at his side
    stood Patton and the valiant score
    who were flung upon a Norman's shore.
    As a nation prayed these hero's fought
    with inspiration each soul wrought.
    They faced the Bulge, they crossed the Rhine
    to form one final battle line,
    then drove to meet a victor's fate
    in the shadows of the Brandenberg Gate.
    .....And the ranks marched on.

    Brothers of "The Forgotten War"
    who remembered Inchon, The Reservoir
    where as the heat of battle rose
    on this cold front they fought, they froze,
    not asking what be freedoms price
    or who should make the sacrifice.
    They held at Seoul, with faith drove on
    to hold the line at Panmunjon.
    All stood in tribute, to the man,
    for each could truly understand
    for they that marched, marched for them too
    to help restore past honors due.
    .....And the parade moved on.

    And in the distance massed a crowd,
    shadowed by a sinful shroud,
    to hide those privileged from the war
    who burrowed deep on foreign shore,
    they dared crawl out, and returned
    to savor life and rights unearned.
    And with them sharing equal blame
    were those who claimed to share no blame,
    whose protests turned our nations flag
    into a jumbled, burning rag,
    who scorned and mocked those with the right
    to serve their land, to join the fight.
    Each found deferment from the call
    in an ivy covered campus hall.

    And those possessed of greatest hate
    went to Hanoi, the Kremlin Gate
    to denounce our land with ignominy,
    and with treason aid the enemy.
    They dared not now to look and face
    the marching lines, to know disgrace
    the presence noble men provoke
    to those who dare not take the yoke.
    The marching ranks looked but ahead,
    each step in cadence of the dead,
    but every soul one thought did share:
    Blest I am here..not with them there.
    .....and the dead marched on

    Across the bridge to Arlington
    the line moved on and stood as one
    in homage at the sacred flame
    that honors heroes without name.
    Now each who marched a new name read
    in voices echoed by the dead
    to call here present souls alive,
    of men who fought and yet survived
    who still bore scars in flesh and mind
    whose hearts sought but true peace to find.
    Here each soul learned as the flame grew,
    it burned to honor those men too.
    Could not this privilege be proscribed
    by comrades that had fought and died?
    Could not immortal men proclaim
    the honors those deprived may claim?
    Yes, those unnamed now join to share
    with those who marched one final prayer:
    In brotherhood we all are one,
    Eternal Lord, thy will be done.

    The task complete, a bugler played
    the funeral notes to end parade,
    and each who marched now left the ranks
    to cross old proud Potomac's banks
    as on the wall in death endeared,
    the names of each, once more appeared
    that living comrades joined in prayer,
    might know the honors heroes share.




  2. #2

    Viet Nam 66/67

    Semper Fi to all my Brothers who did not return home !!!!!


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