Homepage

Most Recent Posts

  • It Was Close

    it was so close one could see
    the bloodshot emptiness of their eyes,
    one could hear
    the rabid screech of their hideous yell:
    it was not mad; it was not madness;
    it was the wildness of a beast
    from the forest from whence they charged.

    In the village nestled in the hills above,
    both nobles and peasantry
    peered down on that field of savagery
    in fear of the raging hoard
    and
    in hope their proud boys
    standing in their unflawed straight lines
    with fine uniforms with perfect gig lines
    and
    matching visored covers
    would prevail.

    the canon and the line of muskets
    lit the early morning
    with bolts of fire,
    disrupted the silence of the morning
    with piercing blasts of canon
    and
    crackle of musket balls,
    cutting those immersed in beastliness
    to smithereens,
    decimating their ranks
    to screaming whimpering piles
    of decimated beggars
    pleading for aid, mercy,
    even merciful death by the blade.
    the prince who ordered the maniacal charge,
    himself a victim of the carnage,
    lay under the carcass of his noble steed,
    moaning in the throes of death.

    the nobles and the peasantry
    looked down from the village hills
    not with joys of victory
    but
    in silence,
    viewed the bloody field.

    the generals in their castle high
    cheered and toasted with glasses of sherry
    for a victory they had not won.

    The opposition stood
    with canon, musket, bayonet,
    their weapons at their side,
    they were men of military precision,
    not a thread harmed;
    they did not cheer
    but
    stood ramrod straight
    with tears running down their faces
    in silence, perhaps mournful.

    the bards back then wrote with praise
    of the glorious enemy defeat,
    of the heroes on their side;
    the minstrels sang the same.

    those men removed their regalia
    and
    went back home to farms
    to work the fields, tend the livestock
    but
    more silent and reflective
    than they had been before.

    later on, the historians
    wrote of gallantry, futility, death,
    making the event of legend,
    heroes of those that stood and fell
    before the writers’ time.

    dust and rain fell on that field
    grass began to grow
    with wildflowers sprouting in clusters
    and
    the earth absorbing the blood.

    years later, a young lad
    frolicked in the field with his dog
    chasing butterflies or an occasional bird
    when
    he stumbled upon a relic,
    a worn wooden religious symbol
    where one of the wild men fell;
    the lad did not know its meaning,
    but
    something in the breeze struck him then;
    he gazed to the wood in silence
    wondering what had happened
    way back when.

    No one remembers the whole story
    what really happened is obscured
    but
    then and now, it should have been remembered
    there are often those vanquished by war,
    yet
    there were only those who still stood
    by those who fell;
    no winning, no victors amongst them,
    only those who lost something.

  • Second Summer Respite

    We have had two summer respites thus far, trips to places and people dear to us. The first one had some serious ups and downs. But the one from which we returned Saturday was pure joy and relaxation.

    We spent almost a week in Sonoma. Alan and Maren Hicks again were our hosts. As usual, they were phenomenal. The couple and i go back to Vanderbilt days.

    This venture to either San Francisco or Sonoma has been an outgoing outing for us. Maren and Maureen are simply amazing together. Their likes, their tastes and their grasp of the world fit perfectly. Alan and i are like…or rather are brothers since we pledged Kappa Sigma at Vanderbilt in 1962.

    Their home in Sonoma is my other “briar’s patch.” It is a perfect size with wonderful landscaping and a backyard that faces a Sebastiani vineyard, which we can and do walk through. As usual, the weather was perfect.

    The bayside of the Marshal House oyser place on Tomales Bay.

    This trip included a beautiful drive to Tomales Bay to dine at The Marshall Store featuring fresh, i mean fresh, oysters, and other seafood. Dining is outside, often chilly from the wind off the bay. Incredible place, wonderful views.

    The Hicks also took us for a day trip to the De Young Museum in Golden Gate Park where we saw an amazing exhibit on Claude Monet’s Impressionist works. Awed, i was.

    But the best part was being with these two folks: just like having 60-plus years roll back.

    Friday evening, Alan picked up some barbeque for dinner, rivaled Texas BBQ. Before hand, we retired to a backyard corner and enjoyed each other’s company with a pre-dinner cocktail.

    The respite, for us, was much needed. We headed back to the Southwest corner on a great flight, just to make it all as good as it could get. Alaska Airlines flies a non-stop from San Diego to Santa Rosa, a small airport with no jetways. We walked to and then from the plane on the tarmac.

    Later tonight after a day of unpacking, i will abscond to my retreat by my chiminea. i will start the fire and reflect on the trip and relax.

    It’s even good in my new memories. Thanks, Alan and Maren.

  • somewhere there is an island

    somewhere there is an island
    somewhere in the seas
    somewhere
    exactly where no one knows
    but
    somewhere
    between here and there
    i’ve been there once
    wish i could go again
    there is no one there now
    the sun is ne’er hid
    behind the pure white cumulus clouds
    until
    the dark descends
    and
    the moon and stars captivate
    with their white light
    no one knows,
    no
    no one knows
    the longing to return to
    this island somewhere 
    brings me solace
    that is all for which i ask
    this island
    somewhere.

  • Memorial

    i climbed my hill this morning just before eight o’clock. The day thus far was a seaport gray. i felt it was appropriate for this day designated to honor those who had died in defense and support of our country, our constitution. It felt somber:

    The top of the hill also was an appropriate place to take time to honor those with whom i served and the others that had passed on due to their military service.

    You aren’t likely to be able to see them, but on the coast to the left of Point Loma at the edge of our land, moored along the coast are the ships of the Pacific Fleet, i barely could make them out, but they are there. Appropriate.

    i saluted the Ensign as it hung two-blocked on the flagstaff. i paused in the silence, and looked at the vista of homes of the affluent, nearly all with pools in their backyard and wondered if the occupants were also thanking the men and women who had defended their right to live as comfortably as they lived and if they understood what a wonderful government we have because it is governed by the constitution and should not be violated, in law, regulation, or spirit, the document those brave people had given their lives to defend.

    At 8:00 a.m. exactly, i lowered the flag to half mast according to the tradition in U.S. Flag regulations. i stood back at saluted. i wore a ball cap worn on my last ship, the USS Yosemite. Although i was not in uniform, i used the cap as my reason for leaving the cap in place and saluting as i had innumerable times while in the Navy (instead of taking it off, holding it in my left hand and placing my hand over my hard, a civilian salute also accoring the the Flag regulations).

    i stood in silence remembering military friends i have lost and all of the others with great affection. i especially thought of Commander Al Pavich and Major Marty Linville. They were two of my closest friends while i was in the Navy. Both passed over that bridge too soon, Al in 2022 and Marty in 2024, because what they suffered during Vietnam service.

    i descended the hill. i will return at noon to two-block the Ensign, again according to U.S. Flag regulations.

    As i descended the hill, i thought about how In the last week or so, my email and social media have been inundated with folks trying to use the day for honoring our lost military members to hawk their goods and services. “Sales” they call it. Sad i call it. i hoped they, at least for a moment today, honoring those folks who gave their lives for them. i hope all of us do.

    This is a great country because of the constitution those folks defended. i hope we have the sense not to violate that constitution and the military members that defended it. We owe that to those we honor today.

  • coming home (with apologies to John Masefield and Robert Louis Stevenson)

    the lone teenager walked down the creosote wood pier;
    the visored lady warriors loomed over him;
    he crossed the brow,
    saluting the Ensign on the fantail
    as he had been trained
    before descending into the bowels of the ship,
    returning to the 01 level below the bridge
    to stand at parade rest
    while his visored lady warrior stood out
    of Narragansett Bay
    to
    his first time at sea,
    which became his new home.

    the wind combed his hair;
    the night cold gave him strength:
    the trail of the moon gave him peace;
    while standing at the rail one evening,
    the mistress of the sea reached up
    to grab his heart;
    the green water forging over the bow
    washed his soul;
    the doldrums taught him patience;
    the stars to navigate by
    showed him the way;
    the heels and rolls of his warrior
    brought him balance;
    the thickened, old, black coffee
    gave him endurance;
    water spouts, flying fish;
    dolphins playing across and under the bow;
    clear nights with millions, millions of stars and planets,
    the swish of the bow wake down the sides;
    the dark clouds and their lightning;
    the angry storms of immense proportion;
    the cloudless days with light winds
    with every hue of blue of the sea;
    showed him awe-striking beauty;
    eventually, he discovered the sea’s mistress
    who had took his heart
    would talk to him and he to her;
    and
    life at sea fit him.

    finally, he left
    his visored lady warriors and the sea’s mistress
    to roam the roads of his world
    for a while
    before
    he returned to the small town of his birth
    in the heart of Tennessee
    to be interred beside his folks:
    he had finally come back home.