For the boys in the neighborhood, our primary occupation when chores were finished and the grownups were leaving us alone was “playing Army.” All of us had toy guns or at least sticks. Given our ages, when dividing into good guys and bad guys, the latter were always Germans and Japs. War was binary. The enemy was obvious and our cause was pure. We were enacting a sort of ancient ritual that required little moral reckoning.
It was
around 1964 when a Hungarian kid (d. 2010) a few years older than me suggested
that we start fighting the Viet Cong. I had no idea what he was talking about. I
didn’t follow the news. Why were these people worthy of our aggression? At
least in our crowd, they never caught on, and I can’t speak for the next
generation of boys. At least one of the guys in my gang was shipped to Vietnam
a few years later. He survived. Another boyhood friend in another neighborhood was
killed over there when I was a senior in high school. That war remained safely abstract
for me.
In 1968-69, the
poet R.L. Barth was a Marine serving as a patrol leader in the 1st
Reconnaissance Battalion in Vietnam, and there was nothing abstract about his
war. Bob this week sent me two poems he had written and printed for family
members. The first, published in The Sewanee
Review, is “Doughboys: Photograph c. 1917,” and is dedicated to Bob’s
grandfather, Bernard Henry Benzinger (1894-1979), a World War I veteran:
“Around a
folded blanket seven doughboys
Intently
watch the dice turn six the hard way.
Like
pre-noir tough guys, three or four clutch sawbucks
Half curled,
ready to shell out or increase
A conscript
private’s base pay. One, raffish,
Tilts his
campaign hat like an old salt.
All seven
would shame Bogart with the angle
Of dangling
cigarettes and arched eyebrows.
But they're
not tough guys, just heartbreakers all,
Stunning the
viewer with impossible youth.”
Bob’s work
is a poetry of remembrance, often across generations and centuries. The second poem is “Semper Fidelis: 1st MARDIV,”
dedicated to Raymond Lawrence Barth (1921-2006), Bob’s father:
“A combat
knife, web belt, some photographs,
Chevrons,
dog tags, and medals: epitaphs
For both the
recent dead and one to die.
While
placing his mementos where mine lie
In the top
dresser drawer, I contemplate
The tours of
duty that they recreate:
Jungle
terrain, twenty-six years apart,
Guadalcanal
and I Corps, war’s grim art.
Their future
dispensation? Surely lost.
There will be no one left who knew their cost.”
The great Irish
novelist John McGahern died on this date, March 30, in 2006 at age seventy-one.
He never went to war but in a 2002 interview with the Guardian he said:
“I think
that each of us inhabits a private world that others cannot see. The only
difference between the writer and the reader is that the writer is able to
dramatise that private world. But that private world, once it's dramatised,
doesn't live again until it finds a reader. When I start to write, words have
become physical presence. It was to see if I could bring that private world to
life that found its first expression through reading. I really dislike the
romantic notion of the artist.”
2 comments:
My maternal grandfather, William Alexander Vance (1898-1974) was a 30-year Navy man and Pearl Harbor survivor. As for me (graduated from high school in 1970), my draft number was so low I was never called up.
I won the lottery. The 1969 Vietnam Draft Lottery. And in 2006, I won the lottery again by getting prostate cancer, presumptively from exposure to Agent Orange. I think of two things every Easter: the celebration of Jesus Christ's resurrection and the beginning of the 1972 Easter Offensive when the North Vietnamese crossed the DMZ into South Vietnam in force. Max Hastings describes this well in his book, 'Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy
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