This happened. It still troubles me.
For the "Support Our Troops" contest. |
“I told them I’d stay for free,” she said, “But they won’t let me.” She was a hospital clerk at the V.A. In 1995, in the year of no budget, When Bill and Newt played chicken And the country played dumb. One day I heard wheels echoing in the empty hall. I looked out and saw a bed with sides Like a medical wheelbarrow With was what was left of a soldier in it. “Tarawa,” someone whispered. “Ever since,” came a reply. Half a century he’d rolled around the V.A., Unable to walk or talk or eat or anything. He’d given up his life for his country, And I was absolutely sure That if you had told him on that day The government would shut down and leave him With only “necessary staff” to care for him-- He’d have laughed if you told him that. If you’d said his country wouldn’t care He’d have slugged you. I read to him, although they said he couldn’t hear, And was glad he couldn't know his country's shame He’s gone, now, I’m sure, to a place where his legs and arms work And his government works, and his country cherishes heroes like him. But there are others, from other Tarawas Rolling down those halls, Soldiers who fought for us And who thought we’d fight for them. Sometimes at night in my own bed I think I hear the wheels in the empty hall And I cry all over again. |