Love during WWII |
The Sweetheart Locket She sits alone at the gravesite oblivious to the rain, Her body sags from heaviness from the weight of all the pain. She wears a faded coat of color more grayish black than blue, A hat of woolen fabric sits atop her head askew. Her face looks as though a child with the fear it does portray, But hands that clutch a locket do give away her age. She sobs ever softly as she holds it close to chest, For her love of 50 years has now been laid to rest. She thought that she would go first and often told him so, He even use to scoff at her when she would let him know. She knew to be without him there would be nothing left, Except a broken place inside all empty and bereft. She recalls their first meeting in the winter of 42', How deep and clear his eyes were like an ocean of emerald blue. It was the middle of the war and he had been sent back, With an arm badly mangled shrapnel still in tack. She was working as a cadet nurse and had tended to many men, But it seemed he was no stranger when first she took his hand. He was calling for his mother with pain he could not hide, She had wiped his face with handkerchief and dried the tears he cried. As the days did pass them by she found they had a bond, That silenced all the screams of death from a war that still raged on. When he asked her to marry him in the spring of 43', He had clasped the sweetheart locket on while still on bended knee. She thought of how she had gasped out loud when first she looked inside, For there was a piece of the handkerchief she had used when he had cried. She had kept it close since then in the good times and the bad, For the site of the fabric did soothe her reminding her of the love that they had. How it did strengthen her when she could find no more words to pray, As she watched her child die of sickness after living for 12 short days. She held to it tightly as her mother reached out in fear, Finally giving up to cancer and dying in that same year. As they both grew older and thoughts grew old and dim, The locket kept her grounded with the memory held within. She would often times remove it and smooth its fraying edge, Bring it softly to her lips and make a silent pledge. That she would never leave his side no matter the turmoil or grief, Even as she watched his memory of her go when Alzheimer's was a thief. She was holding it at bedside when he took his final breathe, Placing it gently to his forehead as he passed away to death. All that she has left is an empty place inside, And a sweetheart locket with a piece of fabric tucked inside. |