Memorial Day Poem by Gregory Orr

Memorial Day



After our march from the Hudson to the top
of Cemetery Hill, we Boy Scouts proudly endured
the sermons and hot sun while Girl Scouts
lolled among graves in the maple shade.
When members of the veterans' honor guard
aimed their bone-white rifles skyward and fired,
I glimpsed beneath one metal helmet
the salmon-pink flesh of Mr. Webber's nose,
restored after shrapnel tore it.



2
Friends who sat near me in school died in Asia,
now lie here under new stones that small flags flap
beside.
It's fifth-grade recess: war stories.
Mr. Webber stands before us and plucks
his glass eye from its socket, holds it high
between finger and thumb. The girls giggle
and scream; the awed boys gape. The fancy pocket watch
he looted from a shop in Germany
ticks on its chain.

Saturday, July 25, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: memorial day
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Paul Warren 25 July 2015

A nice melancholy piece thankyou

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Gregory Orr

Gregory Orr

Albany, New York
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