Lieutenant Jim G Paulos led elements of G Company in a savage counterattack that ousted the intruders supported by Lieutenant James R Mallon’s improvised platoon of H/11, which remained to help man casualty-depleted line.
Improvise (OED): One: to compose on spur of the moment; to utter or perform extempore
two: to bring about or get up on the spur of the moment; to provide for the occasion
Three: […] hence to do anything On the spur of the moment
Improvised platoon Df James R Mallon:
When most of your platoon lies dead in the pumice sands of the South Pacific-Japanese bushido bullets tear flesh and spirit out of the corporeal—husks of limp limbs you fought to defend and they you Japanese mortar fire, machine and small-gun fire fifteen yards in advance of the wire how do you bring about or get up the courage to grab whoever— the nearest marine talk through ears drums burst by mortar succeeding shockwaves forget for the time the men you spent months training sipping beers in Australia laughing over bar stool drunken jokes men you shared your dreams about after away from the mosquitoes away from the constant moisture rain rain rain day and night soaking through fatigues through skin through bone never enough sun to dry out air already saturated sweat or seawater—it is all the same now you must find new men—men you have seen, but do not know the same as your own platoon their life and yours in each others hands alone in a group of stranger-brothers always faithful keep composure in the face your buddy’s entrails pouring into the pumice sand hence to do anything on the spur kicked into your side to block what no man should ever be asked to see and do what you can in the moment to save your division from enemy fire.
§ Cyclops Black Eyes
One summer e’ening drunk to hell He stood there nearly lifeless A gal sat in the corner And it’s how are ye ma’am and what’s yer name And would ye like a drink? She looked at him, he at her All she could do was accept one
And rovin’ a rovin’ a rovin’ she’ll go Through his pair of blue eyes
She knew not the pumice beaches and streams Sometimes walking sometime crawling amongst blood and death ‘neath a screaming sky Where Cyclops black eyes waited for him Was it birds whistling in the trees? Always the Cyclops black eyes waiting for them So they give the wind a talkin’
And a rovin’ a rovin’ a rovin’ he’ll go Away from those Cyclops black eyes
And the arms and legs of other men Were scattered all around Some cursed, some prayed, some prayed then cursed Then prayed and bled some more All he could see were Cyclops black eyes looking at him
No Cyclops black eyes waiting for her And a rovin’ a rovin’ a rovin’ she’ll go And never know what saw his pair of blue eyes
Could she forsee in that pair of blue eyes Decades he’d spend drunk to hell? Sometimes walking sometime crawling Rovin’ and rovin’ away from those Cyclops black eyes
§ Colt 1911**
I was nineteen when I learned my Dad his father’s Colt 1911 pistol
when Dad was young he and his brother found the gun—hidden in the rafters of the cinderblock basement their father built; magazine bullets and pistol on one rafter—separate, except the bullets lived in the magazine
my dad and uncle, like any young boy, were fascinated by the pistol; though too young to feel and know the power and danger in the cold blue metal
when their father and mother were away—home alone they snuck to the hand-laid basement reached around the rafters through years of dust and darkness feeling for the colt and mag scrape-click-pop—ca-chick round in the chamber—“freeze!”
so played boyhood fantasies cowboys & Indians cops & robbers with a lethal toy
so my dad kept it a secret locked in a tarnished steel box locked through the trigger guard magazine separate four silver, dimpled, bullets rolled round between their queue and releaser
I was struck by the weight—heavier than I expected—I felt the years of use polished into the wood grips—thick hand grease sweat blood humidity sand saltwater gun oil mud tears life saved and taken. At the bottom of the wood grips ticked notches deep in the grain—both sides—different numbers; “What are these?” I asked running my finger across the nocth-ticks feeling their depths their absence consciously carved with his next best tool—kabar: workhorse that can baton through five inch diameter logs, machete through two-finger branches, dig a hole to burrow while machinegun fire mows down jungle; easy to sharpen, keeps an edge; full tang to hammer temples or tent posts
“I don’t know; the only thing we have is the lore.”
fI counted seven the number the magazine carries eight total, if you have one in the chamber
You have to commit to fire a 1911, the cliché: don’t pull the trigger—squeeze is how the 1911 fires—a button fits the crotch of the thumb and index finger opposite the trigger on the handle; to unleash the hammer then lead, squeeze the two—firm tight at the target; no shot fired by accident—no Marvins with the 1911.
I am trying a new form of poetry called 'documentary poetry'. This is the story of my grandfather who fought five campaigns in the Pacific Theatre of WWII for the United State Marine Corps. (This is a work in progress)