I last visited my father’s grave at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery in September 2021.
If there is such a thing as beauty to behold in a final resting place for those who served, it exists there just south of St. Louis on the banks of the Mississippi River–fourteen hundred miles east of where I live and write today.
On this Memorial Day, I remember Dad–and the thousands of fallen soldiers gathered around him–with twelve lines I wrote on August 27, 1996 … almost three years after he died.
This poem and forty-one others appear in my book A Path I Might Have Missed.
***
The Soldier on the Hill
I talked with the soldier on the hill today.
We sat, we cried, we laughed, we prayed.
The bells rang true, the trees stood free.
A breeze swept past to welcome me.
Shadows filled the landscape then.
Tempers rose without his pen.
Snowflakes fell, the grass turned green.
All without a change of scene.
Now the soldier rests with them,
Hand-in-hand–all blessed again.
They greet another trailing soul.
Who makes the journey past the knoll.

Beautiful, Mark!
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Thanks, Tom!
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A truly touching tribute, my friend.
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Thank you, Mitch.
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