8 Responses to “Patriotic MySpace Comments (October 2007)”

  1. SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF WORLD WAR III

    Our sons and daughters serve in harms way
    To defend our way of life.
    Some are students, some grandparents
    Many a husband or wife.

    They face great odds without complaint
    Gambling life and limb for little pay.
    So far away from all they love
    Fight our soldiers for whom we pray.

    The plotters and planners of America’s doom
    pledge to murder and maim all they can.
    From early childhood they are taught
    To kill is to become a man.

    They exploit their young as weapons of choice
    Teaching in heaven, virgins will await.
    Destroying lives along with their own
    To learn of their falsehoods too late.

    The fearful cry we must submit.
    And find a way to soothe them.
    Where defenders worry if we stand down
    The future for America is grim.

    Now’s not the time to fight one another
    Or kiss our enemy’s cheek.
    All through history it remains the same
    The strong enslave the weak.

    May God continue to bless America
    Refusing evil, the upper hand.
    It’s up to us to stay resolute
    Defending the liberty of Man.

    NEVER BE AFRAID TO BE PROUD of AMERICA

    America, the abundant, the place I was born
    I’ll cherish till the day I die.
    Where the bones of past heroes lie buried in the ground
    Who loved her the same as I.

    Her mountains are so tall they reach for the sky;
    With prairies where the green grasses grow.
    There’s billions of trees where wild birds nest
    With creatures that flourish below.

    That blue gold called water with which we are blessed
    As raindrops or crystallized snow;
    Changes to rivers and fresh water lakes
    While the winds of our seasons blow.

    There’s the haunt of a whistle from a lonely freight train
    Racing on ribbons of steel
    With the harvest of farms and from the factories
    Balanced in a box on a wheel.

    Some cities have buildings a hundred stories tall
    Structures of concrete, glass and steel.
    A statue in a harbor, a present from France,
    Describes how, inside, we feel.

    That flag on the moon with red and white stripes
    Proves America’s dreams come true.
    A country of heroes who line up to protect
    The past, the present and the few.

    We’ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought
    Never letting Satan’s horde chase us to our door.
    Safeguarding our borders and system of life
    As our forefathers sacrificed before.

    Never be afraid to be proud of America
    And march with the brave, faithful and just.
    Refusing to summit to the will of our enemies
    Standing firm to preserve what we trust.

    By Tom Zart

  2. WHERE WARS ARE WON OR LOST

    Wars are waged by older men
    In battle rooms in countries apart.
    Who call for greater firepower
    And troops for the combat chart.

    While out among the shattered flesh
    The dreams of all have turned gray.
    So young and determined their faces were
    Till on the battlefield they lay.

    Unable to overcome their pride
    The politicians cast their vote.
    For this or that or something else
    As the rage of war sounds its note.

    Wherever wars are won or lost
    The soldiers fall like toys.
    Down through history it remains the same
    Most who die are hardly more than boys.

    Like monkeys in a revolving cage
    Man squabbles for the peanuts of power.
    When will we rise above our greed
    And become as a beautiful flower?

    Death to death, dust to dust
    The wrath of war is a honorable crime.
    It’s the beast within that still prevails
    As it has through the torments of time.

    WAR IS THE GREATEST PLAGUE OF MAN

    As war is fought it takes charge
    And events spin out of control.
    The madness of men can alter the soil
    Which nourishes the roots of their soul.

    Many things will forever change
    Far more then wished to be.
    As the wrath of war starts to destroy
    Those things we fight to keep free.

    War is the greatest plague of man,
    Religion, state, and sanity.
    Any scourge is more preferred
    Than the one which disables humanity.

    When war breaks out, boundaries change
    And all who die are a token
    Of the rage that must run it’s course
    Before words of peace are spoken.

    War I hate, though not men, flags nor race
    But war itself with its ugly face.
    When we lose faith in the brave, which die
    Then we’re not fit to greet those who cry.

    What distinguishes war isn’t death
    But that man is slain by fellow man.
    Crushed by cruelty and injustice
    With his enemy’s murderous hand.

    War tends to punish the punishers
    So the losers won’t suffer alone.
    The essence of war is but violence
    Till the survivors come marching home.

    Sometimes it’s hard to defend what’s right
    Sometimes we’re forced to rise up and fight.
    Sometimes we survive, while others must die
    Sometimes never knowing the reason why.

    The rush of combat is a natural buzz
    Caused by fear, leaving nothing as it was.
    Hunting one another like wild game
    Without a shortage of those to blame.

    Sometimes victory comes too slow or quick
    Sometimes the cost on both sides is sick.
    Sometimes God is asked to intervene
    To help stop the savage from being so mean.

    War is a hell we visit before death
    Fueled by the whisper of the devil’s breath.
    There must be a reason man destroys man
    But why it is so, I can’t understand.

    SEPTEMBER 11th

    After suffering the wrath of a sneak attack
    America now mourns to her very core.
    Though soon her enemies shall all but flee
    From the sound of America waging full war.

    Let there be no doubt, no doubt at all
    That the devil has decided to give us a call.
    We shall defeat hell’s soldiers and cast them out
    And if we die; that’s what freedom is about.

    We shall seek them out wherever they may hide
    Street by street, house-by-house, cave by cave.
    They will be eradicated from the face of the earth
    By the righteous, the loyal and the brave.

    SATAN’S HORDE SHALL BE REMOVED

    Overrun with war and uncontrolled leaders
    Our world becomes more dangerous each day.
    dishonest politicians, criminals and the media
    Survive by their falsehoods at play.

    Bible believers preach, that the end is near
    Our world as a whole is beyond reform.
    God will eradicate all which is wicked
    By His fire of eruption and storm.

    To evil’s victory, I will never concede
    May its supporters anguish in hell.
    By the grace of God and the power of faith
    The goodness of man will prevail.

    What we accomplish is heaven’s measure
    As patriots respond to the threats of man.
    Protect and defend what we love till death
    As the soldiers of Satan arise from the sand.

    FREEDOM

    In their new uniforms
    The young march off
    Not knowing who shall return.
    With a proud devotion
    They brandish their flag
    Leaving loved ones to wonder and yearn.

    May we all be buried
    By all of our children
    Is an ancient tribal prayer.
    They’re so easy to lose
    But so hard to forget;
    Such a burden for a parent to bear.

    Oh, the taste of victory
    Shall soon be forgotten
    But, never that which was lost.
    For those rows of white headstones
    In peaceful green fields
    Make it easy to tally the cost.

    America has survived all attempts to destroy
    Knowing the cruelty of war
    And, we who remain
    Must help keep her free
    For those who can march no more!

    OUR FLAG

    Our flag is fabric wove of thread
    Carried by heroes live and dead.
    She stands for justice and courage too
    With her colors; red, white and blue.

    For all who serve her, there’ll be cheers
    For any who die, there’ll be tears.
    For all who love her, life is swell
    For those who harm her, war is hell.

    How many moms have cried before
    As they sent their children to war.
    How many dads have not returned
    Because our freedom must be earned.

    Wars were waged where brave men died
    As patriots fought side by side.
    Our flag is still the pearl of earth,
    Because of those who prove her worth.

    LOVE OF COUNTRY

    I dedicate this poem from inside my tent
    As the desert winds keep it’s silhouette bent.
    My love of country is at full boil now
    I’d like to describe it but it’s hard to know how.

    Tomorrow I’ll hunt those who enjoy our death
    Cursed by their hatred and foulness of breath.
    I don’t care if it’s another God they serve
    For their crime’s retribution is what they deserve.

    Their horde survives by a different set of rules,
    Though soon they’ll learn the fate of murderous fools.
    Proudly I serve my homeland and president
    Who I’ve sworn to defend one hundred percent.

    While haunted by visions of what I must do
    I fight for justice, and the red, white, and blue.

    VETERAN’S DAY

    The cost of freedom is sometimes high
    Extremely more when our loved one’s die.
    Men and women pledged to fight and serve
    And it’s our support that they deserve.

    Mankind itself is the one to blame
    That all through history, the story’s the same.
    Peace, like love, can be hard to acquire
    Subject always to enemy fire.

    Some how the righteous tend to prevail
    Over the miss-guided, prone to fail.
    No wonder we fear the tongues that lie
    As mankind squabbles beneath God’s sky.

    The danger our solders face is real
    So lets let them know just how we feel.
    Put forth your flag and show them your heart
    As those we love from us depart.

    THE BATTLE FOR BAGHDAD

    Determined though scared, I walk my beat
    On the deadly streets of Baghdad.
    Searching for any who plot our harm
    Or by our death are joyous and glad.

    Standing in shadows caused by the moon
    I’m reminded of my nights back home.
    I wonder if the woman I love
    Is growing tired of sleeping alone?

    I feel remorse for all who live here
    For this place is a madman’s hell.
    And those who wish to keep it that way
    Must be killed or locked away in jail.

    My greatest fear is not my death
    But that I’ll end up in a wheelchair.
    Disabled for the rest of my life,
    Depending on others for my care.

    My wife, she prays for my safe return
    As night and day more GI’s are killed.
    She knows quite well, whatever it takes
    The oath I’ve given will be fulfilled.

    By Tom Zart

  3. FORMIDABLE FOE

    America is the birthday cake of earth
    As the ants march from every direction.
    Thank God for all who have sworn to defend her
    Serving with love, honor, pride, and affection.

    Since the first day George Washington marched off to war
    There have been those who have wished our demise.
    Their hatred, fueled by jealousy and greed
    Was defeated by our brave and the wise.

    Once again, we must face a formidable foe
    Who have pledged by their God to destroy us all
    Misusing their faith as an excuse to kill
    As for a worldwide jihad, their leaders call.

    Some say we should try to appease them
    For if we resist, they’ll hate us even more.
    But the David’s among us shall cast our stones
    Defeating them, as it was done before.

    SHOULD TOMORROW START WITHOUT ME

    Should tomorrow start without me
    Remember I love you.
    Looking down from up above
    Seeing everything you do.

    If I become a casualty
    I pray you will love again
    Whom ever makes you happy
    I’ll consider my friend.

    Should tomorrow start without me
    Remind our boys, God loves all who care.
    And when life seems too harsh and cruel
    With “Him” they must share their prayer.

    I have proven I’m not a coward
    Who breaks and runs to survive.
    Always fearing death will kiss me
    As the streets of Baghdad I drive.

    Should tomorrow start without me
    Be proud I choose to serve.
    Our faith and our patriotism
    Earn the freedom we deserve.

    I miss home more than ever
    It breaks my heart to stay away
    I can’t help but want to hold you
    And whisper what I say.

    AMERICAN SOLDIER

    Our soldiers line up to be remembered
    As the best of the best at their job.
    They wish to be needed and depended on
    To save all we love from the mob.

    They risk their life and limb for liberty
    Standing firm against evil unwilling to break.
    To be part of something greater than themselves
    They are willing to sacrifice whatever it will take.

    THANK HEAVEN FOR HEROES

    Thank heaven for the heroes of life
    Who lead us to overcome those who are not.
    The wise are grateful for all God’s blessings
    Where fools never realize what they’ve got.

    America is the grain train of earth
    Whose people exercise rule by their vote.
    All have a chance to partake and prosper
    As they arrive by foot, plane or boat.

    Our freedom relies on the law of the land
    Our future depends on our grit.
    Our past has known both good and bad
    And our mistakes we are willing to admit.

    The grim of heart hate America
    And choose to put her wonders to shame
    The devotion of most who love and live here
    Rise up to defeat the soldiers of blame.

    THE LONELINESS OF WAR

    I know I’m still here so far, far away
    As I fight for what I believe is right.
    I wonder about you and your mom
    Every moment of every day and night.

    The loneliness of war can drive you insane,
    If you don’t get letters of concern from home.
    Left, right, behind and ahead,
    Death awaits leaving love ones alone.

    We pray to God that we will be saved
    To return home or live the here after.
    Bloody, dirt-covered men, we see everyday
    As we yearn for those times of laughter.

    The far off stare of a fallen comrade
    As you stay by his side till his end.
    No mother ever carried her infant child
    More carefully, than we do a friend.

    Many have their own personal diaries
    To help keep their faculties together.
    Watching hot steel crash into human flesh
    Always makes home seem far away and better.

    I’ve become an expert at dodging, weaving and diving
    So try not to worry too much about me.
    Just help your mom and stand up from the ground
    And while I’m gone be all you can be.

    By Tom Zart

  4. DADS AT WAR

    Where would I be without you dad
    My hero of night and day
    I’m so glad you love my mother
    And take time for us each day.

    The last time we played baseball
    You reached for me with your hand.
    I looked at you, then made a wish
    That I might be just half the man.

    I love my father of this earth
    And I love my father of heaven.
    It’s a lot for me to love, you know
    For I’m only eleven.

    Mom and I sure miss you
    Since you left to defend our flag.
    When others ask, where is your dad
    I can’t help but boast and brag.

    BRAVERY

    Many brave souls lived before now
    Unwept and unknown by their face.
    Lost somewhere in the distant night
    Till a poet chronicles their grace.

    True bravery is shown by performing
    Without witness, what one might be
    Capable of before the world
    Without any or all to see.

    How great the brave who rest in peace
    All blessings from heaven to earth.
    They gave our country but their best
    Those destined to be brave from birth.

    P.O.W.

    When you become a P.O.W.
    You find you’ve lost your liberty and more
    The guy with the gun tells you what to do
    As you yearn for freedoms you had before.

    Your will to serve helps keep you alive
    Though sometimes you wish you were dead.
    Tortures far beyond any normal mind
    And there’s no safety, even your bed.

    Bullets, barbwire, searchlights and sharp teeth
    Keep you in a place you don’t wish to be.
    The food is quite awful and sometimes it moves
    And you’ve no choice of what you hear or see.

    The lucky are released and return home
    Though in their dreams their fate is unsure.
    War may be hell, but confinement is worse
    Cause afterwards you’re never as you were.

    FLY-BOYS

    World War I gave us the fly-boys
    Who flew by the seat of their pants.
    Many would never return from war
    While others survived by chance.

    Their planes were mostly canvas and wood
    Gasoline, bullets, bombs and poison gas.
    Every pilot carried his own pistol
    Wearing leathers, scarf and goggles of glass.

    Aviators had no Parachutes
    To escape their burning plane.
    Many were forced to jump to their death
    Or self inflect a bullet to the brain.

    Blimps where known as battleships of the sky
    The roar of their engines gave reason for fear.
    They flew so high they were hard to shoot down
    Hiding above clouds till their targets drew near.

    Tracer bullets for the first time were used
    In the guns of airplanes to set blimps a fire.
    The skies became man’s highway of death
    With duty and honor their driving desire.

    How many Fly-boys have we lost since then
    Those days of the Great War and more?
    Where do we get such brave souls of chance
    Who rise from the rest in the battles of war?

    THE HINGE OF HISTORY

    The hinge of history swings in all directions
    As the happenings of the past are written down.
    Out of all that has occurred since man’s beginnings
    Less has been recorded than waits to be found.

    Babylonians kept chronicles of history
    Hebrews wrote the past as a dramatic story.
    Greeks had no faith in the future at all
    Believing mans repeated errors doom his glory.

    Christians added a new dimension to history
    Looking forward to Christ’s return to earth.
    An on going drama involving man and God
    Believing all are created of equal worth.

    Some have asked why must we study history
    It just encourages us to live in the past.
    When we forget history we repeat its mistakes
    As the outcome of humanity is cast.

    GENERAL WASHINGTON

    Once in command, he boxed in the British
    At Boston where he captured Dorchester Heights
    Overlooking the Brits at his mercy
    As his men took aim with their cannon sites.

    The British commander had but one choice
    To sail to New York to renew the fight.
    Where the English had much greater forces
    Who soon chased Washington’s men in full flight.

    They continued on to Pennsylvania
    After crossing the Hudson in retreat
    With the British forces in hot pursuit
    It looked as though George was doomed to defeat.

    When winter seemed to have stopped the fighting
    That’s when Washington crossed the Delaware.
    On that Christmas night he captured Trenton
    Where Hessians were surprised and unaware.

    He whipped the British at Princeton
    Where in victory his men began to sing.
    Washington then wintered at Morristown,
    Training his troops for the combat of spring.

    Washington fought bravely at Brandywine
    And again at a place called Germantown
    But the British were the victorious ones
    As the dead of both sides covered the ground

    Americans were blessed early that spring
    When the French entered the war on their side.
    Though most suffered frostbite at Valley Forge
    With the help of the French they marched in stride.

    The battles raged on, in the North and South
    As the King’s soldiers laid waste to the land.
    Washington himself was in great despair
    Pleading for aid for his weakened command.

    His prayers were answered by 5000 troops
    And a French fleet who took Chesapeake Bay.
    They bottled up Cornwallis at Yorktown
    Who surrendered to victory drums at play.

    Yorktown was really the end of the war
    Though not many quite realized that fact yet.
    But the British soon grew tired of the fight
    And the terms for its end were signed and set.

    Washington yearned to retire at home
    But his country chose him first president.
    Cheering crowds waved flags of love and support,
    For they believed that “he,” by God, was sent.

    All Poems By
    Tom Zart

  5. NEVER BE AFRAID TO BE PROUD of AMERICA

    America, the abundant, the place I was born
    I’ll cherish till the day I die.
    Where the bones of past heroes lie buried in the ground
    Who loved her the same as I.

    Her mountains are so tall they reach for the sky
    With prairies where the green grasses grow.
    There’s billions of trees where wild birds nest
    With creatures that flourish below.

    That blue gold called water with which we are blessed
    As raindrops or crystallized snow;
    Changes to rivers and fresh water lakes
    While the winds of our seasons blow.

    There’s the haunt of a whistle from a lonely freight train
    Racing on ribbons of steel
    With the harvest of farms and from the factories
    Balanced in a box on a wheel.

    Some cities have buildings a hundred stories tall
    Structures of concrete, glass and steel.
    A statue in a harbor, a present from France
    Describes how, inside, we feel.

    That flag on the moon with red and white stripes
    Proves America’s dreams come true.
    A country of heroes who line up to protect
    The past, the present and the few.

    We’ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought
    Never letting Satan’s horde chase us to our door.
    Safeguarding our borders and system of life
    As our forefathers sacrificed before.

    Never be afraid to be proud of America
    And march with the brave, faithful and just.
    Refusing to submit to the will of our enemies
    Standing firm to preserve what we trust.

    By Tom Zart
    Soldier For The Lord

    THE HORNETS of HELL

    The hornets of hell swarm from their nest
    Overwhelming all the victims they can.
    To sting as many souls as possible
    In their destruction of the glory of man.

    They murder, rob, rape and plunder
    While provoking the meek to submit.
    They lie, deceive and mislead
    And depend on the world to forget.

    Eager to enhance their numbers
    They are the cheerleaders of disgrace.
    Their agendas of sin must be stopped
    For the betterment of each race.

    Endless is God’s test of time
    To measure man’s spiritual worth
    Unwholesome deeds tempt us all
    Festering in the repugnance of earth.

    The hornets of hell are on the hunt
    In all directions by day or night.
    The Armor of God shields man’s soul
    And gives us our resolve to fight.

    The champions of heaven in rapture await
    To see who will stumble and fall.
    They watch us struggle, in our world of woe
    As they pray we will heed, God’s call.

    Fools declare we must hide from view
    And leave the hornets of hell alone
    But when we ignore the liabilities of life
    The failings of man become, our own.

    By Tom Zart
    Most Published Poet
    On The Web

  6. TOM ZART’S
    “50”
    AMERICA AT WAR POEMS

    NEVER BE AFRAID TO BE PROUD of AMERICA

    America, the abundant, the place I was born
    I’ll cherish till the day I die.
    Where the bones of past heroes lie buried in the ground
    Who loved her the same as I.

    Her mountains are so tall they reach for the sky
    With prairies where the green grasses grow.
    There’s billions of trees where wild birds nest
    With creatures that flourish below.

    That blue gold called water with which we are blessed
    As raindrops or crystallized snow;
    Changes to rivers and fresh water lakes
    While the winds of our seasons blow.

    There’s the haunt of a whistle from a lonely freight train
    Racing on ribbons of steel
    With the harvest of farms and from the factories
    Balanced in a box on a wheel.

    Some cities have buildings a hundred stories tall
    Structures of concrete, glass and steel.
    A statue in a harbor, a present from France
    Describes how, inside, we feel.

    That flag on the moon with red and white stripes
    Proves America’s dreams come true.
    A country of heroes who line up to protect
    The past, the present and the few.

    We’ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought
    Never letting Satan’s horde chase us to our door.
    Safeguarding our borders and system of life
    As our forefathers sacrificed before.

    Never be afraid to be proud of America
    And march with the brave, faithful and just.
    Refusing to submit to the will of our enemies
    Standing firm to preserve what we trust.

    WHERE WARS ARE WON OR LOST

    Wars are waged by older men
    In battle rooms in countries apart.
    Who call for greater firepower
    And troops for the combat chart.

    While out among the shattered flesh
    The dreams of all have turned gray.
    So young and determined their faces were
    Till on the battlefield they lay.

    Unable to overcome their pride
    The politicians cast their vote.
    For this or that or something else
    As the rage of war sounds its note.

    Wherever wars are won or lost
    The soldiers fall like toys.
    Down through history it remains the same
    Most who die are hardly more than boys.

    Like monkeys in a revolving cage
    Man squabbles for the peanuts of power.
    When will we rise above our greed
    And become as a beautiful flower?

    Death to death, dust to dust
    The wrath of war is a horrible crime.
    It’s the beast within that still prevails
    As it has through the torments of time.

    WAR IS THE GREATEST PLAGUE OF MAN

    As war is fought it takes charge
    And events spin out of control.
    The madness of men can alter the soil
    Which nourishes the roots of their soul.

    Many things will forever change
    Far more then wished to be.
    As the wrath of war starts to destroy
    Those things we fight to keep free.

    War is the greatest plague of man,
    Religion, state, and sanity.
    Any scourge is more preferred
    Than the one which disables humanity.

    When war breaks out, boundaries change
    And all who die are a token
    Of the rage that must run it’s course
    Before words of peace are spoken.

    War I hate, though not men, flags nor race
    But war itself with its ugly face.
    When we lose faith in the brave, which die
    Then we’re not fit to greet those who cry.

    What distinguishes war isn’t death
    But that man is slain by fellow man.
    Crushed by cruelty and injustice
    With his enemy’s murderous hand.

    War tends to punish the punishers
    So the losers won’t suffer alone.
    The essence of war is but violence
    Till the survivors come marching home.

    Sometimes it’s hard to defend what’s right
    Sometimes we’re forced to rise up and fight.
    Sometimes we survive, while others must die
    Sometimes never knowing the reason why.

    The rush of combat is a natural buzz
    Caused by fear, leaving nothing as it was.
    Hunting one another like wild game
    Without a shortage of those to blame.

    Sometimes victory comes too slow or quick
    Sometimes the cost on both sides is sick.
    Sometimes God is asked to intervene
    To help stop the savage from being so mean.

    War is a hell we visit before death
    Fueled by the whisper of the devil’s breath.
    There must be a reason man destroys man
    But why it is so, I can’t understand.

    SEPTEMBER 11th

    After suffering the wrath of a sneak attack
    America now mourns to her very core.
    Though soon her enemies shall all but flee
    From the sound of America waging full war.

    Let there be no doubt, no doubt at all
    That the devil has decided to give us a call.
    We shall defeat hell’s soldiers and cast them out
    And if we die; that’s what freedom is about.

    We shall seek them out wherever they may hide
    Street by street, house-by-house, cave by cave.
    They will be eradicated from the face of the earth
    By the righteous, the loyal and the brave.

    SATAN’S HORDE SHALL BE REMOVED

    Overrun with war and uncontrolled leaders
    Our world becomes more dangerous each day.
    dishonest politicians, criminals and the media
    Survive by their falsehoods at play.

    Bible believers preach, that the end is near
    Our world as a whole is beyond reform.
    God will eradicate all which is wicked
    By His fire of eruption and storm.

    To evil’s victory, I will never concede
    May its supporters anguish in hell.
    By the grace of God and the power of faith
    The goodness of man will prevail.

    What we accomplish is heaven’s measure
    As patriots respond to the threats of man.
    Protect and defend what we love till death
    As the soldiers of Satan arise from the sand.

    SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF WORLD WAR III

    Our sons and daughters serve in harms way
    To defend our way of life.
    Some are students, some grandparents,
    Many a husband or wife.

    They face great odds without complaint
    Gambling life and limb for little pay.
    So far away from all they love
    Fight our soldiers for whom we pray.

    The plotters and planners of America’s doom
    pledge to murder and maim all they can.
    From early childhood they are taught
    To kill is to become a man.

    They exploit their young as weapons of choice
    Teaching in heaven, virgins will await.
    Destroying lives along with their own
    To learn of their falsehoods too late.

    The fearful cry we must submit.
    And find a way to soothe them.
    Where defenders worry if we stand down
    The future for America is grim.

    Now’s not the time to fight one another
    Or kiss our enemy’s cheek.
    All through history it remains the same
    The strong enslave the weak.

    May God continue to bless America
    Refusing evil, the upper hand.
    It’s up to us to stay resolute
    Defending the liberty of Man.

    SO DEAR TO MY HEART

    So dear to my heart are my loved ones at home
    As I toss and I turn in my bunk all alone.
    Everyday I see death, hate, and corruption
    Combat is God’s proof of man’s malfunction

    For family, comrades, and myself I pray
    To my love with this poem I wish to convey.
    I knew I loved you though never how much
    Till by war, I’m forced beyond your touch.

    Where violence thrives, there’s the stench of death
    With the taste of fear on every breath.
    Who shall prevail, who shall die
    As the sadistic kill beneath God’s sky.

    Baghdad has become man’s highway to hell
    Where the hearts of darkness are alive and well.
    I count each day till it’s time to come home
    And be with my love and never alone.

    Love You
    Your Marine

    FREEDOM

    In their new uniforms
    The young march off
    Not knowing who shall return.
    With a proud devotion
    They brandish their flag
    Leaving loved ones to wonder and yearn.

    May we all be buried
    By all of our children
    Is an ancient tribal prayer.
    They’re so easy to lose
    But so hard to forget;
    Such a burden for a parent to bear.

    Oh, the taste of victory
    Shall soon be forgotten
    But, never that which was lost.
    For those rows of white headstones
    In peaceful green fields
    Make it easy to tally the cost.

    America has survived all attempts to destroy
    Knowing the cruelty of war
    And, we who remain
    Must help keep her free
    For those who can march no more!

    OUR FLAG

    Our flag is fabric wove of thread
    Carried by heroes live and dead.
    She stands for justice and courage too
    With her colors; red, white and blue.

    For all who serve her, there’ll be cheers
    For any who die, there’ll be tears.
    For all who love her, life is swell
    For those who harm her, war is hell.

    How many moms have cried before
    As they sent their children to war.
    How many dads have not returned
    Because our freedom must be earned.

    Wars were waged where brave men died
    As patriots fought side by side.
    Our flag is still the pearl of earth,
    Because of those who prove her worth.

    LOVE OF COUNTRY

    I dedicate this poem from inside my tent
    As the desert winds keep it’s silhouette bent.
    My love of country is at full boil now
    I’d like to describe it but it’s hard to know how.

    Tomorrow I’ll hunt those who enjoy our death
    Cursed by their hatred and foulness of breath.
    I don’t care if it’s another God they serve
    For their crime’s retribution is what they deserve.

    Their horde survives by a different set of rules,
    Though soon they’ll learn the fate of murderous fools.
    Proudly I serve my homeland and president
    Who I’ve sworn to defend one hundred percent.

    While haunted by visions of what I must do
    I fight for justice, and the red, white, and blue.

    VETERAN’S DAY

    The cost of freedom is sometimes high
    Extremely more when our loved one’s die.
    Men and women pledged to fight and serve
    And it’s our support that they deserve.

    Mankind itself is the one to blame
    That all through history, the story’s the same.
    Peace, like love, can be hard to acquire
    Subject always to enemy fire.

    Some how the righteous tend to prevail
    Over the miss-guided, prone to fail.
    No wonder we fear the tongues that lie
    As mankind squabbles beneath God’s sky.

    The danger our solders face is real
    So lets let them know just how we feel.
    Put forth your flag and show them your heart
    As those we love from us depart.

    THE BATTLE FOR BAGHDAD

    Determined though scared, I walk my beat
    On the deadly streets of Baghdad.
    Searching for any who plot our harm
    Or by our death are joyous and glad.

    Standing in shadows caused by the moon
    I’m reminded of my nights back home.
    I wonder if the woman I love
    Is growing tired of sleeping alone?

    I feel remorse for all who live here
    For this place is a madman’s hell.
    And those who wish to keep it that way
    Must be killed or locked away in jail.

    My greatest fear is not my death
    But that I’ll end up in a wheelchair.
    Disabled for the rest of my life,
    Depending on others for my care.

    My wife, she prays for my safe return
    As night and day more GI’s are killed.
    She knows quite well, whatever it takes
    The oath I’ve given will be fulfilled.

    SADDAM

    The king of Baghdad has fallen
    Never to dictate again.
    Man shall sentence him for this crimes
    And heaven shun him for his sin.

    For his tyranny, he was famous
    In every capital on earth.
    Till apprehended in his spider hole
    Completely stripped of his worth.

    He is guilty of rape and genocide
    While he ruled without remorse.
    His power and prestige were toppled
    Once George Bush set his course.

    Though it may seem that the wicked triumph
    And have conquered by their brutality of hand,
    Through the power of faith they are defeated
    By the seed of goodness in man.

    FORMIDABLE FOE

    America is the birthday cake of earth
    As the ants march from every direction.
    Thank God for all who have sworn to defend her
    Serving with love, honor, pride, and affection.

    Since the first day George Washington marched off to war
    There have been those who have wished our demise.
    Their hatred, fueled by jealousy and greed
    Was defeated by our brave and the wise.

    Once again, we must face a formidable foe
    Who have pledged by their God to destroy us all
    Misusing their faith as an excuse to kill
    As for a worldwide jihad, their leaders call.

    Some say we should try to appease them
    For if we resist, they’ll hate us even more.
    But the David’s among us shall cast our stones
    Defeating them, as it was done before.

    SHOULD TOMORROW START WITHOUT ME

    Should tomorrow start without me
    Remember I love you.
    Looking down from up above
    Seeing everything you do.

    If I become a casualty
    I pray you will love again
    Whom ever makes you happy
    I’ll consider my friend.

    Should tomorrow start without me
    Remind our boys, God loves all who care.
    And when life seems too harsh and cruel
    With “Him” they must share their prayer.

    I have proven I’m not a coward
    Who breaks and runs to survive.
    Always fearing death will kiss me
    As the streets of Baghdad I drive.

    Should tomorrow start without me
    Be proud I choose to serve.
    Our faith and our patriotism
    Earn the freedom we deserve.

    I miss home more than ever
    It breaks my heart to stay away
    I can’t help but want to hold you
    And whisper what I say.

    AMERICAN SOLDIER

    Our soldiers line up to be remembered
    As the best of the best at their job.
    They wish to be needed and depended on
    To save all we love from the mob.

    They risk their life and limb for liberty
    Standing firm against evil unwilling to break.
    To be part of something greater than themselves
    They are willing to sacrifice whatever it will take.

    THANK HEAVEN FOR HEROES

    Thank heaven for the heroes of life
    Who lead us to overcome those who are not.
    The wise are grateful for all God’s blessings
    Where fools never realize what they’ve got.

    America is the grain train of earth
    Whose people exercise rule by their vote.
    All have a chance to partake and prosper
    As they arrive by foot, plane or boat.

    Our freedom relies on the law of the land
    Our future depends on our grit.
    Our past has known both good and bad
    And our mistakes we are willing to admit.

    The grim of heart hate America
    And choose to put her wonders to shame
    The devotion of most who love and live here
    Rise up to defeat the soldiers of blame.

    THE LONELINESS OF WAR

    I know I’m still here so far, far away
    As I fight for what I believe is right.
    I wonder about you and your mom
    Every moment of every day and night.

    The loneliness of war can drive you insane,
    If you don’t get letters of concern from home.
    Left, right, behind and ahead,
    Death awaits leaving love ones alone.

    We pray to God that we will be saved
    To return home or live the here after.
    Bloody, dirt-covered men, we see everyday
    As we yearn for those times of laughter.

    The far off stare of a fallen comrade
    As you stay by his side till his end.
    No mother ever carried her infant child
    More carefully, than we do a friend.

    Many have their own personal diaries
    To help keep their faculties together.
    Watching hot steel crash into human flesh
    Always makes home seem far away and better.

    I’ve become an expert at dodging, weaving and diving
    So try not to worry too much about me.
    Just help your mom and stand up from the ground
    And while I’m gone be all you can be.

    SACRIFICE,TRANSFORMATION,AND UNRESTRICTED WARFARE

    The Japanese hadn’t lost a war since 1598
    Each man carried 400 rounds of ammunition
    (twice as many as an American infantryman)
    With five days rations and fearless determination.

    The men in the badly wrapped brown uniforms
    Since their early childhood had been taught
    That to die for the emperor and one’s country
    Was the greatest of all glories to be sought.

    Moreover, the hardware backing them was awesome
    As sharpshooters they were accurate up to a thousand yards and more.
    Their ships were faster, their guns bigger, Their torpedoes better
    And their planes matchless in quality, aerobatics and score.

    Only by sacrifice, transformation, and unrestricted warfare
    Was America able to overcome and prevail.
    Again America must stand firm to survive
    As we face a new monster from Hell.

    VIETNAM

    SOLDIER IN THE RAIN

    I’m just a soldier who stands in the rain
    My memories of home are what keep me sane.
    Back home is a land of milk and honey
    Ruled by lust and love of money.

    But, what can I say, when I serve her true
    For I volunteered to see this war through.
    Now, that I’m here, it’s hard to believe
    We’re just the victims of those who deceive.

    As darkness falls on the rice fields of Nam
    Scared men with rifles walk the shadows of the calm.
    It’s thousands of miles to the steps of my church
    With its stained glass, steeples and lost souls who search.

    Off in the distance I see an arc light
    Bombs being dropped on children at night.
    I’ve seen that evil they call the yellow rain
    And how life withers when it’s sprayed by a plane.

    All of my buddies have been taken away
    No more touch football will they ever play.
    Zipped in their body bags for the long trip home
    Are some of the bravest, I’ve ever known.

    War is a hell, devised by man
    There’s death in the sea, the sky and the land.
    Lord, I can’t help but wish I were home
    Back with my love, whom I hope is alone?

    DADS AT WAR

    Where would I be without you dad
    My hero of night and day
    I’m so glad you love my mother
    And take time for us each day.

    The last time we played baseball
    You reached for me with your hand.
    I looked at you, then made a wish
    That I might be just half the man.

    I love my father of this earth
    And I love my father of heaven.
    It’s a lot for me to love, you know
    For I’m only eleven.

    Mom and I sure miss you
    Since you left to defend our flag.
    When others ask, where is your dad
    I can’t help but boast and brag.

    BULLETS AND BARBWIRE

    We awoke to the crack of rifle fire
    With mortar rounds hitting the ground near by.
    The flying shrapnel was absorbed by sand bags
    Which saved lots of us who wished not to die.

    The hot spent shell casings fell to the ground
    As the VC charged our fortified hill.
    We killed so many the stench made us sick
    While we fought to live and not for a thrill.

    Barbwire, bullets and clay-mores took their toll
    As red and green tracers lit up the sky.
    Before long I was the last GI left
    When napalm caused my enemy to fry.

    Fleeing the sound of our choppers gunfire
    The enemy retreated to the caves and trees.
    Then I cried, “thank you ” to heaven above
    As I checked out my buddies on my knees.

    Somehow I managed to survive the day
    Though many I’ve served with names I have read
    Carved in the shinny black stone of The Wall
    Are my comrades of war, among the dead.

    KOREA 1950

    UN soldiers fought and were forced to retreat
    Behind sandbags protected by barbwire hoops.
    Many GI’s died as they held off attacks
    By 810,000 Communist troops.

    Our guys used phosphorus, flame-throwers and napalm
    For without these weapons they could not survive.
    The Communist charges led by buglers
    Till the UN could start it’s offensive drive.

    On the battlefield of death and misery
    Many froze with their hands still stuck to their guns.
    While others hobbled with their boots wrapped in rags
    City boys, farmers, students, fathers and sons.

    With a million and a half dead or wounded
    Both sides singed a truce before generals involved.
    July 27th, 1953
    And though thousands were orphaned, nothing was solved.

    WORLD WAR II

    WAR

    As war is fought it takes charge
    And events spin out of control.
    The madness of men can alter the soil
    Which nourishes the roots of their soul.

    Many things will forever change
    Far more then wished to be.
    As the wrath of war starts to destroy
    Those things we fight to keep free.

    War is the greatest plague of man
    Religion, state, and sanity.
    Any scourge is more preferred
    Than the one which disables humanity.

    When war breaks out, boundaries change
    And all who die are a token
    Of the rage that must run it’s course
    Before words of peace are spoken.

    TROOP SHIP

    Our ship had sailed before the dawn
    Surrounded by the thickest of fog
    Still ignorant of our destination
    Or what was written in the captain’s log.

    It didn’t take long for me to see
    Our cruise was not for fun
    An experience of a lifetime
    With nowhere for us to run.

    Twenty knots per hour we cruised
    As the white caps passed us by
    Ten thousand young Americans
    Off to Europe to die.

    A sailor told us not to worry
    Someday we’d get our mail.
    Uncle Sam would make sure
    No matter how far we sail.

    Thirty feet deep I tried to sleep
    Beneath our ship’s waterline
    Just the place for claustrophobia
    To enter into my mind.

    My favorite vest was my May West
    Which I wore all the time
    Just in case of German U-boats
    Or an underwater mine.

    Thirty-three days we were at sea,
    We crossed the equator twice.
    Many years have passed since then
    Those years of sacrifice.

    BRAVERY

    Many brave souls lived before now
    Unwept and unknown by their face.
    Lost somewhere in the distant night
    Till a poet chronicles their grace.

    True bravery is shown by performing
    Without witness, what one might be
    Capable of before the world
    Without any or all to see.

    How great the brave who rest in peace
    All blessings from heaven to earth.
    They gave our country but their best
    Those destined to be brave from birth.

    PEARL HARBOR

    Sunday, December the seventh
    In the year of 1941,
    While most of Hawaii still slept
    Came the planes of the Rising Sun.

    Waves of bombers and fighters flew
    From the decks of the Japanese ships.
    While our planes were still on the ground
    “Banzai” was spoken from their lips.

    The winds of war had been blowing
    Across the oceans of our earth
    Though not till Pearl had been bombed
    Did we realize what freedom’s worth.

    Wars are fought and won on two fronts
    At home and on the battle line.
    Both are equally important
    When war consumes our heart and mind.

    The attack brought us World War II
    With death, pain and separation.
    All who had served were well aware
    Of their sacrifice for nation.

    CONFLICT

    The harder the conflict we sometimes face
    The far more glorious is the victory.
    Tyranny like hell is tough to defeat
    When it raises its head throughout history.

    War never leaves a country as it was
    When neutrality is a word disregarded.
    As the murderous hands of man himself
    Are to blame for all who have departed.

    D DAY - THE WALL

    Over two hundred rangers scaled “The Wall”
    A stone cliff over one hundred feet tall.
    Some of them made it all the way to the top
    While others fell and perished from their drop.

    Those who climbed over, had answered God’s call
    For men to stop evil once and for all.
    They fought the Germans and destroyed their guns
    To save the lives of our fathers and sons.

    So many years have passed since then
    When our world’s future was saved by brave men.
    We cannot forget the hell they went through
    Before the skies, again turned blue.

    D-DAY

    D-Day raised the curtain on the conflict
    That fore shadowed the end of Hitler’s dream.
    The largest joint combat landing ever
    Though the blood from both sides flowed like a stream.

    When their boats hit the sand, their ramps went down,
    And all within paid a visit to hell.
    They jumped out to do good for their country
    And to kill the enemy without fail.

    They fought the Germans, tides, winds and the waves
    In conditions not easily foreseen.
    By night the battle was in our favor
    With bravery, valor, death, and men who scream.

    The corpses littered the beach for five miles
    Though heroism had carried the day.
    With literally thousands dead or wounded
    Those who were left were determined to stay.

    They faced great odds and chose not to protest
    And won the war that put evil to shame.
    Most came home, married and raised their babies
    But those who could not we recall with pain.

    MIDWAY

    It was June the 4th 1942
    As I was floating in the ocean alone
    The ship I had sailed on, sank to the bottom
    And I thought I would never again, see home.

    The Japanese fleet had steamed in from the east
    With the intentions of capturing Midway.
    Though they were stopped by American war ships
    Whose guns, bombs and torpedoes planes saved the day.

    All night long, I watched the fireworks of war
    And on the second day we turned up the heat.
    As big bombers from Hawaii dropped their loads
    On Japanese ships who soon chose to retreat.

    An imperial pilot came floating close by
    Who had been chewed on by the beasts of the sea.
    I couldn’t help but feel passion for this is man
    Who had answered his call just like me.

    When it was over, I was plucked from the deep
    By men in a lifeboat just after the dawn.
    For two days I had watched the battle for, Midway;
    Now it’s quiet and the enemy has gone.

    SURVIVAL

    I drifted all night and was loosing my hope
    Before by the moon’s light I saw dry land.
    I floated over and through its reefs to the beach
    Where I quickly smoothed out my tracks in the sand.

    All I had was my dagger and a canteen
    And it was May 4th of 43.
    Just me alone on an enemy island
    Wasn’t a safe place for a sailor to be.

    I felt I could kill in less than a heartbeat
    If that’s what it took for me to survive.
    I’d already said thanks so many times
    For” God” was the reason I was alive.

    Off in the dark, I herd two men’s voices
    Laughing and talking in a language not mine.
    Inch by inch I crept to their campsite
    Where on what they were eating, I would soon dine.

    I stabbed them both and took their fish, rice and wine;
    Then ran my way back to the raft by the beach.
    Soon I was floating in the ocean again
    And far enough out where bullets couldn’t reach.

    The next day I was picked up by a seaplane
    Whose crew spotted my sail from the air.
    Once inside and safe, I cried like a child
    For the dead whom would forever be there.

    It was hard to believe heaven let me live
    A farm boy from Kansas, in high school last year.
    My girlfriend is blond and she hates it I ‘m gone.
    Though I’m a veteran of battle, death, and fear.

    OKINAWA

    Okinawa was to be our last stop
    Before we invaded Japan.
    The largest landing of the Pacific war
    As our soldiers ran across the sand.

    At first our marines were scarcely opposed
    But on the fifth day hell they found.
    A solid wall of human resistance
    Firing their weapons from caves in the ground.

    Air power and big guns had little affect
    On their cliff forts carved deep in the limestone.
    It took man against man to root them out
    As flying bullets pierced flesh and bone.

    Kamikaze pilots crashed their planes
    Knocking out transports and war ships.
    As the Imperial air force struck our fleet
    Cries of fear and hate spewed from lips.

    One hundred, ten thousand Japanese
    By the end of the battle were killed.
    Over twelve thousand Americans died,
    Before, just our flag flew over the field.

    BATTLE OF THE ATLANTIC

    After the fall of France in 1940
    The Germans soon began their own blockade
    With most their efforts in the Atlantic
    Hoping to cut Britain’s flow of war trade.

    With fast surface raiders like the Bismarck
    Merchant ships caught at sea, had little chance.
    The German’s small navy sank ship after ship
    Till the British Navy destroyed war’s romance.

    Shipping losses from German U-boats increased
    And the battle of the Atlantic seemed lost.
    But soon America would enter the war
    To defeat freedom’s enemies at all cost.

    Multitudes would die and their families cry
    Before World War II would be fought to its end.
    What a waste of mankind, which had lost its mind
    Though now, our enemy is our friend.

    PARTING

    The truest words, which portray my love
    I speak to you from within my heart.
    May we always recall how we feel
    Though through conflict we’re forced to part.

    No one can say how long they will last
    For life is not everlasting.
    Yet most hope to be blessed by love
    By he who does our casting.

    As the fear of battle bites my flesh
    My thoughts of home help keep me sane.
    There’s no guarantee that I’ll survive
    But either way, I’ll serve without shame.

    Should the cold hands of death reach for me
    I pray my soul will awake from sleep.
    To the voice of God assuring me
    That my spirit, he’s chosen to keep.

    So try to remember while I’m gone
    That the person I need most is you.
    I’ll fight like hell to stay alive
    To return home to the love I knew.

    P.O.W.

    When you become a P.O.W.
    You find you’ve lost your liberty and more
    The guy with the gun tells you what to do
    As you yearn for freedoms you had before.

    Your will to serve helps keep you alive
    Though sometimes you wish you were dead.
    Tortures far beyond any normal mind
    And there’s no safety, even in your bed.

    Bullets, barbwire, searchlights and sharp teeth
    Keep you in a place you don’t wish to be.
    The food is quite awful and sometimes it moves
    And you’ve no choice of what you hear or see.

    The lucky are released and return home
    Though in their dreams their fate is unsure.
    War may be hell, but confinement is worse
    Cause afterwards you’re never as you were.

    GENERAL QUARTERS

    General quarters, general quarters
    All hands man your battle station!
    Sunday morning, December the 7th
    As war confronted our nation.

    We soon found out it wasn’t a drill
    But instead it was war for real.
    As you watch the death of friends and shipmates
    It’s more anger than fear you feel.

    Japanese warplanes came flying in low
    As I took aim with my gun sight.
    From the deck of a ship anchored at Pearl
    Damaged, though crew still eager to fight.

    I saw the face of a pilot, who crashed
    Surrounded by black smoke and fire.
    Some of my bullets must have found their mark.
    For his death was but my desire!

    Two thousand, three hundred and twenty-three killed
    In a battle less than two hours.
    With the heart of our Pacific fleet gone
    Japan had flexed their naval powers.

    The bombing and strafing of ships and troops
    Caused our congress to declare full war.
    Where many a man laid down his life
    Fighting for flag, country and more.

    KENNEDY= THE WAR YEARS
    PT-109

    After the attack on Pearl Harbor
    He applied for sea duty in the war.
    Where Lieutenant John F. Kennedy
    Became known for his bravery and more.

    In the dark hours before dawn
    On August 2, of 43.
    Kennedy commanded a torpedo boat
    Through the blackness of night at sea.

    PT 109, was on Solomon’s patrol
    With a 12-man crew in a plywood craft.
    A Japanese destroyer plowed through the night
    Ramming and cutting Kennedy’s boat in half.

    Two of the crew just disappeared
    A third was badly burned.
    Kennedy himself was thrown to the deck
    Where in pain his leadership he earned.

    Some of his men had never learned to swim
    As he gathered them on the bobbing bow.
    The hours passed tell it seemed it would sink
    So they made for an island and here’s how.

    He ordered those who could to swim
    The others were to hang on to a beam.
    Kennedy grabbed the injured sailor
    And off they tread through the ocean stream.

    With his teeth clenched on the burnt man’s vest straps
    Skipper Kennedy swam 3 miles.
    5 hours later they all made it
    Despite their hardships, sharks, and trials.

    The next problem was how to summon up help
    Without arousing the enemy all around.
    After several attempts swimming to other islands
    Eventually two natives in a canoe were found.

    Kennedy scratch a note on a coconut
    To be delivered to a base 38 miles away.
    The message made it and they were saved
    And their courage still lives us today.

    WORLD WAR I

    FLY-BOYS

    World War I gave us the fly-boys
    Who flew by the seat of their pants.
    Many would never return from war
    While others survived by chance.

    Their planes were mostly canvas and wood
    Gasoline, bullets, bombs and poison gas.
    Every pilot carried his own pistol
    Wearing leathers, scarf and goggles of glass.

    Aviators had no Parachutes
    To escape their burning plane.
    Many were forced to jump to their death
    Or self inflect a bullet to the brain.

    Blimps where known as battleships of the sky
    The roar of their engines gave reason for fear.
    They flew so high they were hard to shoot down
    Hiding above clouds till their targets drew near.

    Tracer bullets for the first time were used
    In the guns of airplanes to set blimps a fire.
    The skies became man’s highway of death
    With duty and honor their driving desire.

    How many Fly-boys have we lost since then
    Those days of the Great War and more?
    Where do we get such brave souls of chance
    Who rise from the rest in the battles of war?

    THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

    In 1860 life was good
    Till its simpleness ceased one day.
    The North wished to save the Union
    While the South chose to break away.

    America was torn apart
    As six hundred thousand died.
    Throughout four years of total war
    Women without husbands cried.

    The sad fact of the Civil War
    Is what was left at its end.
    Too many times, men’s evil acts
    Destroyed both foe and friend.

    The problem was, once it began
    There was no peace or compromise.
    Total victory must be proclaimed
    Before rage would leave men’s eyes.

    Destroy all that helps the enemy
    Was the cry of either side.
    Anything to obtain victory
    As death on horseback did ride.

    Black men dressed in old uniforms
    Became the Union’s reserve.
    They fought and died for their freedom
    And their rights they earned and deserve.

    Lifestyles would forever change
    For all who survived the war.
    It had ended as it began
    With sadness, misery and more.

    Both sides prayed to the same God
    And spoke words from the Bible.
    The prayers of both were not answered
    For all involved were liable.

    THE KANSAS FRONTIER

    Coronado, in his search to find gold for Spain
    Was the first European on the green Kansas plane.
    Explorers and traders were arriving from France.
    They saw the buffalo and the Indians who danced.

    At the mouth of the Kaw were campfires in the dark
    Two men by the river named Lewis and Clark.
    Large numbers of Indians, forced out from the East
    Resettled to Kansas where the buffalo feast.

    So, many a cowboy decided to stay
    It wasn’t very long and most Indians were forced away.
    When Missouri joined the Union; the slave states equaled the free.
    Which way would Kansas vote, congress was anxious to see?

    The Heart-Landers were bleeding; their towns were on fire
    As raiders from the slave states tried to force their desire.
    The settlement of Lawrence was sacked by a mob
    In revenge came John Brown, who would murder and rob.

    Kansas joined the Union as the Civil War began.
    After four long years of tragedy, many women lost their man.
    Cattle trails met the railroads as they pushed across the state.
    Farmers planted corn and wheat as the buffalo awaited their fate.

    Those frontier days have long since gone, though the sunflower is still here
    My childhood home of Kansas where the buffalo roam with the deer.

    BLACK POWDER BRIDGE

    A courier rider hands his papers to me
    They are instructions from Robert E. Lee.
    I am advised now is the time
    To stop the troop movement on the Rock Island line.

    I muster my men and they load up the boats
    We powder our pistols and darken our coats.
    Traveling the currents, the sun slips from sight
    As brave men with a purpose have gathered to fight.

    We capture a bridge before the moonrise
    The Yankees who are here shall soon feed the flies.
    The evil of war feeds on my brain
    As I light the fuse to destroy a train.

    Above us a trestle of timber and tar
    As we pull our oars for a willowed sandbar.
    From the banks of the river; we watch it approach
    There’s shadows of soldiers, in the windows of a coach.

    With a burst of bright yellow and a roar in my ear
    I hear them scream as they ‘re falling in fear.
    The river is boiling in steam, steel and stems
    Back home their families shall soon sing funeral hymns.

    The one lone survivor was a red stallion stud
    I lassoed his neck, and freed him from the mud.
    As I ride in his saddle beneath the stars that shine
    I pray for forgiveness and some peace of mind.

    War is a lesson we re eager to learn
    When man has that fever to murder and burn.
    Lord, please forgive me for what I have done
    For all those I’ve silenced were some mother’s son.

    THE FEVER OF FEAR

    Cannons are bursting hot metal from the ground.
    Soldiers are looting and burning our town.
    The fever of fear rushes through my veins
    As too many Bluecoats jump from troop trains.

    Smoke from hot barrels is swirling around
    As four thousand muskets volley their sound.
    All of my comrades have stopped a lead ball
    Most cry out, then stumble and fall.

    Even the young lad who carried our flag
    Now he lies dead as he clings to that rag.
    Wagons with the wounded trail blood on the ground
    Death and destruction are easily found.

    The Generals are crying ’cause they can’t stand defeat
    But it’s always the soldier who dies on his feet.
    Horse hooves are pounding on a bridge made of boards
    As the sunlight reflects from the blades of their swords.

    Quickly I hide out in the roots of a tree
    Where the dirt has eroded and there’s just room for me.
    After dark I sneak out with the cover of fog
    Then float down the river, as I cling to a log.

    Songs of their victory, ring out through the night
    While from the cold, muddy water, I see their firelight.
    It makes me remember my old country church
    Where the preacher spoke God’s word from his holy perch.

    That the seed of all conflict began in a cave
    When man, like the wild wolf had to prove he was brave.

    THUNDER IN THE GROUND

    Cannons are bellowing from a ridge far away.
    The battle lines are forming and there’s little time to pray.
    Musket balls are pelting like hailstones from the sky
    I’m so full of fear cause I don ‘t want to die.

    From beyond yonder hill comes a terrifying sound
    It’s the music of the buglers and there’s thunder in the ground.
    The fast-riding troopers have all drawn out their swords.
    They ‘re shouting and screaming as they charge up the gorge.

    It’s hard to believe how many make it through
    As they’re hacking and shooting at the boys dressed in blue.
    Then come the soldier men who run upon their feet
    Every time I drop one, my heart skips a beat.

    There’s a storm on the ground made of death, dust and smoke
    My throat is so dry, I can ‘t help but choke.
    The fury of the battle is bound to settle down
    When most of the fighters lie dead on the ground.

    After dark, the stretcher-bearers are afraid to search around.
    The wild hogs eat the wounded and I can ‘t stand the sound.
    Come dawn, we dig ditches for all the brave, lifeless men.
    Then quote words from our Bible praying heaven lets them in.

    SLAVERY

    When you chain the neck of a slave
    The other end fastens to you.
    Your heart and soul become corrupt
    And all which is evil you’ll do.

    No government shall exist for long
    Who’s people are not really free.
    Though around the world there are those
    Who stay blind to how life should be.

    Any who must enslave others
    Will dwell in their own living hell
    After death, they’ll join their master
    In that place from heaven he fell.

    But till then we’ll fight and resist
    Making them put their chains away.
    And those of us who may die first
    From heaven shall watch and pray

    BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER

    In the course of becoming officers
    The young men of West Point bonded like brothers.
    Till roomers of Civil War transformed friend to foe
    As many cadets chose to serve others.

    Fifty-five of sixty major battles fought
    Were lead by graduates of the long gray line.
    Yankees and Rebels ravaged one another
    For to kill and plunder were virtues of the time.

    Over six hundred thousand soldiers were consumed
    Not counting multitudes of population.
    Cities, farms and the countryside were laid to waste
    Before our Union was restored to a nation.

    THE LITTLEST SOLDIER

    Nine year old Johnny Clem who stood just four feet tall
    Ran away from Ohio to answer his country’s call.
    He joined up with the Union and became a drummer boy
    Soon to prove the gun he wore was far more than a toy.

    Armed with a sawed-off musket, cut down to just fit him
    He shot a Rebel horseman who tried to do him in.
    Awarded his sergeant’s stripes and the silver medal
    His comrades offered him hot coffee from their kettle.

    The newspapers of the North, gladly published his story
    Telling of the nine year old who earned his country’s glory.

    THE BATTLE

    The moon is sky high
    And perfectly round
    As it highlights the beauty
    Of disputed ground.

    Life is a journey
    Where the passage is free.
    After, there’s judgment
    By the living and Thee.

    Tomorrow’s carnage,
    We’ll survive if we can.
    Death and dismemberment
    By the hand of man.

    Some will stumble
    With absence of breath.
    While others charge
    Into the face of death.

    We’ll race toward the battle
    And pray for the best
    Hoping somehow
    We pass God’s test.

    BUGLES

    Their red and blue, ragtag flag stood out
    Against their dust covered uniforms of gray.
    Savagely we fought to kill our enemy
    As the battle raged on in the heat of the day

    Volley after volley we put forth our blaze
    With thousands of led balls snapping flesh and bone.
    Blistering sweat rolled down every face
    As the tunes of war by bugles were blown.

    There was a clanking sound of ramrods in barrels
    As each new minieball was loaded and fired.
    Some shot aimlessly into the smoke
    While others took aim at the worn and tired.

    Bullets were popping like the fourth of July
    Yet our enemy kept surging ahead.
    All at once they broke and ran off in groups
    Scattering as for the forest they fled.

    From behind the protection of a stacked-stone wall
    The victorious cheered or just sat starring
    At all the bodies of friend and foe
    While for the wounded the surgeons were caring.

    Soon the war was over and I survived
    Despite it’s brutality on trampled ground.
    From boy to man I was transformed
    Though, still in the night I hear its sound.

    LEAF ON THE WATER

    America’s East Coast was settled by the Brits
    As the Indians rule began to recede.
    After many a battle, they lost their land
    Giving into the white man’s power and greed.

    In years to come like a leaf on the water
    The Indians were swept away by the white man.
    As trappers and pioneers pushing westward
    Brought death and disease to the land.

    With the white settlements came the fur traders
    Followed by soldiers, forts, whiskey and form tools.
    None of which helped the Indians to survive
    Who chose to wage war, and break the white man’s rules.

    Many treaties were made, just to be broken
    By those eager for land, timber, furs and gold.
    Prospectors arrived to plunder the land
    And to be farmers, the Indians were told.

    The combat raged on, to the western prairie
    Over mountains and down through the desert sand.
    Indians proved to be formidable foe
    As both sides fought from afar and hand-to-hand.

    Lieutenant Colonel Custer, led his cavalry
    In search of fame and tribal disgrace.
    But instead he and his men were butchered
    By hostile Indians with paint on their face.

    Around the campfires of Rosebud and Pine Ridge
    Singing warriors danced till Sitting Bull’s death.
    Most were forced to surrender at Wounded Knee
    Where many sad Indian would draw their last breath.

    With their fighting spirit completely broken
    And their ancient tribal ways forever gone.
    Proud Indians were moved to reservations
    Where their once great history in song lives on.

    THE HINGE OF HISTORY

    The hinge of history swings in all directions
    As the happenings of the past are written down.
    Out of all that has occurred since man’s beginnings
    Less has been recorded than waits to be found.

    Babylonians kept chronicles of history
    Hebrews wrote the past as a dramatic story.
    Greeks had no faith in the future at all
    Believing mans repeated errors doom his glory.

    Christians added a new dimension to history
    Looking forward to Christ’s return to earth.
    An on going drama involving man and God
    Believing all are created of equal worth.

    Some have asked why must we study history
    It just encourages us to live in the past.
    When we forget history we repeat its mistakes
    As the outcome of humanity is cast.

    THE ALAMO

    The leaves of the cottonwoods hung motionless
    As outside the walls Santa Anna’s horde closed in.
    A small band of Texans watched and waited
    Preoccupied by combat and how life would end.

    The battle raged from building to building
    Till the old mission’s chapel was the last to fall.
    Over 180 Texans died fighting to the man
    Never to yield, surrender or crawl.

    Six weeks later Sam Houston rallied his forces
    With “Remember the Alamo” as their battle cry.
    Attacking and defeating Santa Anna’s army
    To win independence for Texas or die.

    The Spanish word for “cottonwood” is “Alamo”
    The long time popular name for the mission.
    Today the stout-walled old chapel still stands
    Preserved as a shrine of sacrifice and tradition.

    GENERAL WASHINGTON

    Once in command, he boxed in the British
    At Boston where he captured Dorchester Heights
    Overlooking the Brits at his mercy
    As his men took aim with their cannon sites.

    The British commander had but one choice
    To sail to New York to renew the fight.
    Where the English had much greater forces
    Who soon chased Washington’s men in full flight.

    They continued on to Pennsylvania
    After crossing the Hudson in retreat
    With the British forces in hot pursuit
    It looked as though George was doomed to defeat.

    When winter seemed to have stopped the fighting
    That’s when Washington crossed the Delaware.
    On that Christmas night he captured Trenton
    Where Hessians were surprised and unaware.

    He whipped the British at Princeton
    Where in victory his men began to sing.
    Washington then wintered at Morristown,
    Training his troops for the combat of spring.

    Washington fought bravely at Brandywine
    And again at a place called Germantown
    But the British were the victorious ones
    As the dead of both sides covered the ground

    Americans were blessed early that spring
    When the French entered the war on their side.
    Though most suffered frostbite at Valley Forge
    With the help of the French they marched in stride.

    The battles raged on, in the North and South
    As the King’s soldiers laid waste to the land.
    Washington himself was in great despair
    Pleading for aid for his weakened command.

    His prayers were answered by 5000 troops
    And a French fleet who took Chesapeake Bay.
    They bottled up Cornwallis at Yorktown
    Who surrendered to victory drums at play.

    Yorktown was really the end of the war
    Though not many quite realized that fact yet.
    But the British soon grew tired of the fight
    And the terms for its end were signed and set.

    Washington yearned to retire at home
    But his country chose him first president.
    Cheering crowds waved flags of love and support,
    For they believed that “he,” by God, was sent.

    All Poems By
    Tom Zart

  7. THE MAD DOGS OF MAN

    Wherever dwell the mad dogs of man
    There is corruption, plunder and hate.
    In every city, town, or village
    Those who promote distrust deserve their fate.

    All are born as an innocent child
    Till mislead by others along the way.
    God has always loved his children
    Though it breaks His heart when they stray.

    The mad dogs of man never repent
    For they have no sense of shame or sorrow.
    Worshiping dominance and the dark side of life
    Abusing victims as if there were no tomorrow.

    God gives the will to sin no more
    And to overcome evil unwilling to cease.
    The mad dogs of man must be stopped
    Who murder, rape and destroy world peace.

    Samson, Solomon, and David
    Were chosen by God to stand tall.
    They faced great odds and the fear of death
    Refusing to ignore their call.

    The time has come for the good men of earth
    To band together to restrain the horde.
    Standing firm against tyranny where it exists
    Putting the mad dogs of man to the sword.

    By Tom Zart

    INTO THE TEETH of THE DOG

    All through history man was born to struggle
    Surviving nature, disease, greed, and war.
    Since his conception he has remained the same
    Choosing to serve evil or good as before.

    Our boys and girls face the teeth of the dog
    In hot spots all over our earth.
    They leave their families and all they love
    To protect and preserve what liberty is worth.

    The foes they face are the mad dogs of man
    With a desire to kill, disfigure and enslave.
    They sing and dance to the death of others
    Teaching principles of hate till the grave.

    Support our troops who battle the horde
    While we live the good life back home.
    When you see a soldier show them your smile
    Say “hello we love you and your not alone.”

    By Tom Zart

  8. SHEPHERDS of LIFE

    The twelve Apostles appointed by Christ
    Were given power to cast out evil within.
    He sent them forth to preach, teach and heal
    As God’s shepherd’s from Heaven to men.

    Republicans and democrats now campaign for office
    In God’s land of liberty, freedom and choice.
    Deliberately shaping their future in history
    By their judgment, accomplishment and voice.

    Once more we must choose our shepherds of life
    Driven by love, liberty and country’s call.
    Propelled by duty, honor and faith
    Pledging to protect and defend justice for all.

    Our world has become more dangerous than ever
    Due to war, hate, plunder and disease.
    Take heed therefore and ponder your vote
    As you pray who to vote for on your knees.

    By Tom Zart
    Most Published Poet
    On The Web

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