Thought for today

Oneputt
Oneputt Club Member Posts: 9,144 ✭✭✭
2,500 Likes 1000 Comments
edited November 2016 in General Chat #1

The soldiers gift

I speak to you from the dust

I am the man who went to war

The man that gave his all

The man you never saw

I left my home just a boy

A true mans duty, etched in my heart

No excuses to avoid, what was expected

What we did, set us apart

There came a time to make a choice

So many of us picked up that gun

We marched off happy and singing 

We marched to the beat of well worn drum

The weeks, the months, the years

Aged us, with each battle we fought

Family letters, gave us respite

It was their freedom, for which we fought

The price for freedom is paid in blood

Paid, with the farewell of peaceful dreams

The nightmare and the stink of death 

Cradling you, in deep pit like seams

You can't dig it all out

You can't wash it all away

That's when you hope, there is a God

That's when, you learn pray

Limbs displayed like Christmas decorations

Screams that pierce the night

No longer a boy, am I

And oh, so tired of the fight

We gave up our friends

New friendships we banned

We gave our everything

In a forlorn, foreign land

I never felt like a hero 

when they pinned that medal to my chest

I was just another survivor 

Death, took away the best

Now I have gone to meet my maker

To look for comrades lost 

There seems to be centuries of soldiers

That is war and that is the cost

So I speak to you from the dust

From beyond the great deathly rift

Were you worthy of our sacrifice 

If so, what have you done with our gift



By Mike Conway


Comments

  • Bakers2
    Bakers2 Forum Participant Posts: 8,194 ✭✭✭
    2,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited November 2016 #2

    Very moving. Not read it before. Ive tried to use their 'gift' wisely and have always been grateful I never had to 'serve'. I wonder what 'they' would make of our efforts?? 

  • tombar
    tombar Forum Participant Posts: 408
    edited November 2016 #3

    Very poignant.  We visit my hubby's uncle who is buried near Armetieres in France.  His 100th anniversary of his death was last year on 22 April.  Luckily, my grandad made it home, with a bullet hole in his neck.  My dad made it home from serving in the
    Far East in the Royal Navy in the 2nd World War.  My hubby made it from serving in the 14/20 Kings Hussars (tanks), who were deployed to the border in the 1960s when Russia moved in to take over Czechslovakia, just in case the Russians didn't stop there. 
    Apparently, if they had kept coming, our tanks had about 8 minutes before being killed.  Although, on a good note here, his regiment used the Centurion tank which was tested in a nuclear blast and it still work

  • Oneputt
    Oneputt Club Member Posts: 9,144 ✭✭✭
    2,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited November 2016 #4

    Tombar, your hubby's regiment and my regiment amalgamated to form the Kings Royal Hussars

  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,957 ✭✭✭
    2,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited November 2016 #5

    Like others I am thankful to all our service men and women. 

    My Grandad returned from the WWI alive but with terrible memories and a stutter that lasted allhis life.

    Dad was in the Royal Navy in WWII, only in the last year but again lasting memories.

    Husband served for 45 years in the Army. Several tours of Northern Ireland.  Tombar (14/20th Hussars aswell in Hohne)

    Eldest Son is still serving, tours of Bosnia, Irag, Afganistan I'm proud and grateful to them all for all the sacrifices they have made so that we can all enjoy life in a free country.

  • nelliethehooker
    nelliethehooker Club Member Posts: 13,643 ✭✭✭
    5,000 Likes 1000 Comments Name Dropper
    edited November 2016 #6

    My contribution:-

    In Flanders fields the poppies blow
    Between the crosses, row on row,
    That mark our place; and in the sky
    The larks, still bravely singing, fly
    Scarce heard amid the guns below.

    We are the Dead. Short days ago
    We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
    Loved and were loved, and now we lie
    In Flanders fields.

    Take up our quarrel with the foe:
    To you from failing hands we throw
    The torch; be yours to hold it high.
    If ye break faith with us who die                                

    We shall not sleep, though poppies grow                         In Flanders fields

     

  • JillwithaJay
    JillwithaJay Club Member Posts: 2,485 ✭✭
    500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited November 2016 #7

    I'm grateful that my grandad, dad, brother, two nephews and our son all came back home safely.  

    photo 78301b06-7bdd-45fe-8ae2-d4d2cae14135_zpssi5htrez.jpg

  • volvoman9
    volvoman9 Forum Participant Posts: 1,053
    500 Comments
    edited November 2016 #8

    I salute all our hero,s and i will be remembering them at the cenotaph tomorrow.

    peter.

  • artyboo
    artyboo Forum Participant Posts: 457
    edited November 2016 #9

    I remember my great great uncle John. Ypres. I probably would never have met him but do so wish I had. Remembering all those girls and boys who have died.

  • MJ730
    MJ730 Forum Participant Posts: 184
    edited November 2016 #10

    Very poignant.  We visit my hubby's uncle who is buried near Armetieres in France.  His 100th anniversary of his death was last year on 22 April.  Luckily, my grandad made it home, with a bullet hole in his neck.  My dad made it home from serving in the
    Far East in the Royal Navy in the 2nd World War.  My hubby made it from serving in the 14/20 Kings Hussars (tanks), who were deployed to the border in the 1960s when Russia moved in to take over Czechslovakia, just in case the Russians didn't stop there. 
    Apparently, if they had kept coming, our tanks had about 8 minutes before being killed.  Although, on a good note here, his regiment used the Centurion tank which was tested in a nuclear blast and it still work

    Write your comments here...My grandfather was killed in action at the battle of Armentieres and is buried in Rue David military cemetery.We often visit and my 1 regret is that I never took my Father to see it before he died.

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
    1000 Comments
    edited November 2016 #11

    Spookiest experience I had was at the Thiepval memorial. Saw my name on one of the panels. The unfortunate chap died on my birthday.