A POEM IN THREE ACTS ACT ONE (In which the motif is established) The night after my nephew’s graduation from Marine bootcamp (I don’t think they call it bootcamp) we went to dinner on Coronado Island, seven of us, him in the dress uniform he had spent two hours ironing because the Marine Hymn was my hummed ear worm and every time I turned the corner of the hotel suite tromping the shores of Tripoli, I would see him and the iron both standing at attention. I would laugh and say, “You really don’t have to do that,” and he would say, “Oh, but I do,” and he would return to ironing until I would again forget. Finally pressed, white belt cinched, white hat and gloves, red piping, single chevron on his sleeve, shoes shined like Easter Sunday, the rest of us dressed in pride and family. And then that man came by our table to say, “Thank you for your service to our country,” and we were proud. ACT TWO (In which complexities arise) At our college graduation, the president asks for different types of graduates to stand - the first in their family to go to college, honors, 4.0s, youngest, oldest, parents-slash-children, husbands-slash-wives, siblings, and military veterans, and every year the vets get a rousing ovation, the biggest commencement applause, and I wonder why it isn’t the 4.0s or the firsts. This is a college after all. Frankly, most of us are pacifists. Well, the humanities folks anyway. The parents and friends and aunts and uncles in the audience for our rural community college graduation are the ones who weren’t the first in their family to go to college, and they vigorously applaud when the vets stand, and they yell and whistle like the war was just won. ACT THREE (In which some justice is served) The yang of the nation gets ample pomp and circumstance, plenty of praise and glory, deserved I won’t argue, but more so than others? Not everyone can soldier, but everyone can serve, and so I offer a salute. To the College Professor, Sherpa of Curiosity, Whetstone, Lighthouse, On-Ramp, Thank you for your service to our country. To the Bartender, Purveyor of Magical Elixirs, Physician, Therapist, Vaudevillian, Thank you for your service to our country. To the Lawn Guy, Rider of the Mechanical Machete, Weed-Eater, Tree-Trimmer, Suburban Olmsted, To the Musician and Actor, Teller of Our Stories, Drumbeat, Mirror, Catharsis Channel, To the Delivery Driver, Foot Soldier of Capitalism, Dog-Treater, Bringer of Joy, Supply Chain Coda, Thank you for your service to our country. To the Farmer, Maître d’ of the World, Fence-Mender, Earth Mother, First Cause, To the Building Contractor and the Insurance Seller and the Nurse and the Preschool Teacher and the Social Worker and the Mechanic and the Writer and the Lawyer, yes, even the Lawyer, and the Undocumented Farm Worker and the Bus Driver and the Convenience Store Clerk and the guy who stands in the middle of the road to stop and start the traffic that has been reduced to one lane because of construction, Thank you for your service to our country. © 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
