Hallie,
did you know?
Did Marshall wear his uniform,
stiff, in the expected way
like wooden stands placed
behind tall flowers to
keep them up straight
in award-winning gardens?
Did he come to you
to say he would leave
Harvard and fight
overseas with an eager face
like a child serious about
a lemonade stand as a
business? He had wanted
to be a pilot, but he
was too tall.
Hallie, when he decided
to be a navigator, did you
try to talk him
out
of
it?
Hallie,
did you know?
You know he trained
as a navigator on a
plane and was stationed
all over the United States.
Because your husband was
a ship commander, did you
believe, Marshall
believed, he’d
survive the German attack?
Did he laugh and say, “The
Germans don’t have
anything on me,” to
reassure you of his confidence
when he took his leave?
Did you hug and kiss
him, or did you stand
back after you had
picked a small hair
off of his uniform?
Hallie,
did you know
that was his
last
goodbye?
The legend goes
Marshall’s plane was
shot down by the
Germans over the
storm gray waters of
the English Channel.
The crew’s bodies
were
never
found.
Hallie,
did you replay
your last goodbye
like I did when
I watched my
daughter die?
Did you scream
in the open and
walk without a
place to walk to,
or because you
were from
that generation,
you kept your feelings
tucked in and your
back, stiff, like wooden
stands placed behind
tall flowers to keep them
up straight in
award-winning gardens?
Hallie,
We had a body.
a small hand curled,
for a short time, to
hold on to, and I
can’t imagine when you
knew nothing,
could hold nothing
except Marshall’s shirt.
Like me,
You had a second
child, too, and
did you allow yourself
the time to fall apart?
Hallie,
did you speak
of Marshall again,
or just work in
a garden you
planted in his
memory?
Hallie,
did your
second son,
like my only son,
ask when
Marshall
(Corrie)
would
come home
again?
By Rebecca T. Dickinson Copyright 2020 R.T. Dickinson
Dedicated to Mimi and Mom.
In memory of my grandfather, T.L., great grandmother, Hallie, great uncle, Marshall, and my daughter, Corrie.
This is the fifth in my goodbye series. July is Bereaved Parents Month
This free verse poem is about the loss of my Great Uncle Casper Marshall Durgin, Jr. and his mother during World War II.

Lovely poem 💐 They all live in us ❤️
Thank you!
Hugs ma’am.
I read your comment on Vincent’s page. You are a strong woman. But know that God is for you and will lead you through the highs and lows of this. ❤❤