
I watched the
flag pass by one
day.
It fluttered in
the breeze.
A young Marine
saluted it,
And then He
stood at ease.
I looked at him
in uniform
So young, so
tall, so proud,
With hair cut
square and eyes
alert.
He'd stand out
in any crowd.
I thought how
many men like
him
Had fallen
through the
years.
How many died on
foreign soil?
How many
mothers' tears?
How many pilots'
planes shot
down?
How many died at
sea?
How many
foxholes were
soldiers'
graves?
No, freedom is
not free.
I heard the
sound of taps
one night,
When everything
was still.
I listened to
the bugler play
And felt a
sudden chill.
I wondered just
how many times
That taps had
meant "Amen,"
When a flag had
draped a coffin
Of a brother or
a friend.
I thought of all
the children,
Of the mothers
and the wives,
Of fathers, sons
and husbands
With interrupted
lives.
I thought about
a graveyard
At the bottom of
the sea
Of unmarked
graves in
Arlington.
No freedom is
not free.
Kelly Strong
kellystrong@aol.com
©1981


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