I’m not the veteran I’m talking about this Veteran’s Day. I never got to serve in the military thanks to my physical health. Several other members of my family did, but the one I’m talking about here is my dad, William Almas Perry. Born March 4, 1926, he was at the right age to join the military during World War II.
He rarely spoke at all about his service, mentioning to his young daughters only that he had served in the Philippines and in England. “But what did you do in the war, Daddy?” we pressed one day, probably on a Veteran’s Day. He shut us down quickly with “I picked up dead people” and walked away, leaving us with the horrific mental scene of a battlefield filled with bodies.
It was not until his funeral and afterwards many decades later that we learned the truth. His “I picked up dead bodies” was what he did after the war while finishing his service in England as an ambulance driver for the military. He just didn’t want to talk about what he did in the Philippines. We heard about that from the veterans who had gone to war with him, from the same small town, who had known him as a boy and a man.
My father, like many country boys who had to catch their own food, was a dead shot with a rifle and had a hunter’s keen eye for his prey. The army chose him to save the lives of many of his fellow soldiers by sending him into the jungles of the islands first and taking out the enemy snipers waiting for them. The fact that he came back alive is proof of how good he was at his job. The fact that I never saw him use a gun in anything but a demonstration to my brother in law of his military shooting pose and his continued ability to hit a bulls-eye was proof of how his service affected him.
After his death, one of his many cousins gave us a couple of poems he had sent back to his mother during his service that she had sent to the newspaper for printing. The exact dates of the writing are uncertain, but they were both written during the war. She told us that there were more, but until more of the old newspapers are scanned into the computer and I can look them up, these are the only two I have.
OBJECTIVE – HOME!
By PFC William A. Perry, United States Army
O God, I did not
Come out to this war
From a park bench,
Or from a rented room.
I came from HOME!
And I brought with me family words:
Garden, crib, fireside, front door,
Wife, little fellow.
Now they are all mixed in
With the war jargon:
Jeep, tank, foxhole,
Tommy gun, blitz.
Help me, God, to keep
My thinking straight.
Grant the impossible –
Make home – our Home –
Seem real in battle.
Show me how to
Sort out my thoughts
And use the words about home;
Even when I am sitting in a swamp
Hours at a time,
Not daring to move
More than my eyes;
They’ll keep me sane.
I’ll be a better human,
And just now,
When fighting is my job,
I want to stay human.
It didn’t take a war
To show me
How I love my home.
But it has taken a war
To show me
How it will feel to
Walk out from Hell
Straight to a Paradise
That men call Home!
O God, let ours rest
Under the shadow of Your hands.
MY BUDDY
by PFC William A. Perry, United States Army
Hit again! That’s twice today;
Why don’t they get it over
And blast me all away?
Feeling mighty weary,
Losin’ all my stuff.
Buried in a foxhole –
That’s what I call tough.
Ain’t got strength to wiggle,
Must be awful weak.
Tongue is just one big blister;
I can hardly speak.
I’m no Christian soldier,
Never had the luck.
Just a no-good drifter,
Just a fighting buck.
Never had no learnin’
Never taught to pray.
Want to talk to Jesus –
Don’t know what to say.
Where’d you come from, Buddy?
Wasn’t here before.
Don’t look like no soldier,
You ain’t used to war.
Wanna use my foxhole?
Cuddle up right nice;
Have a drink of water –
Sorry, there’s no ice.
Gee, your hand is bleedin’
Guess they got you, too.
Nasty rats of Hitler,
That’s the way they do.
You and me together
Strangers in this sink;
Sharing drops of water,
All there is to drink.
What’s that on your shoulder?
Buddy, that’s no gun!
You should have some weapon –
War ain’t just clean fun.
Guess that blasted bullet
Threw me for a loss.
Eyes are getting hazy;
What you got, a cross?
Funny sort of helmet,
Looks just like a thorn.
Never seen one like it,
Never, since I’s born.
Aw, your head is bleedin’,
Let me wipe your brow.
I got strength to do it –
Strong as ever, now.
Say, you tryin’ to help me?
Well, that ain’t no use –
I’m beyond all helpin’;
Took too much abuse.
Still it makes me better
Just to know you’re here;
Yeah, I know I’m dying,
But I got no fear.
Crown of thorns and cross?
Golly, I remember –
You’re the King! The boss!
Thought I was unlucky –
All I’ve sacrificed;
But I’m dying happy
In the arms of Christ.
I’m a Christian soldier.
Got no pain, no grief.
Take me up to Heaven
Like you took the thief.
Jesus, gentle Jesus,
Got no pain, no fear.
Hidin’ in a foxhole,
And you found me here.