I knew Pearl, comely, calm Pearl eyes as blue as the skies that warmed her sands where we walked and talked dreamed the days away her voice so sweet on the Pacific winds it made me forget about home I was breaking daily bread dipping it in the yellow yolk promise of eggs when little gunner Joe said come down below to see the kitty he found crouched in the shadowed corner no bigger than the rivets get her some milk he said when we placed the offering in front of her she roared a lion’s roar… and the roar kept coming and the young living thing disappeared into the darkness... the stench of smoke the screeching screams the fierce rocking of the hull and blackness which came too fast to touch all spoke with equal madness telling us doom can come on a sunny Sunday morn in Pearl’s land falling, is something we all know in the flat land of dreams in the lucky light of day, and on that Sunday morn, in the boiling bowels of our ship slowly, with some giant hand in command the water, the water, the water we all had grown to love now taunting our feet, then our knees the pounding began the eternal pounding the pounding of the hopeful in Pearl’s blue skies and our pounding, the pounding of the ******, without any eyes the water now at our waists now at our chests and then only our frozen faces against the hard steel that had been our home had the last few breaths of air to breathe heard the last few gasps of desperation and the feeble futile pounding of those in Pearl’s darkened sun… now we rest in this sunken tomb the guests roaming above with cameras and tearless eyes for they were not the ones who heard our cries those who did, do not return for Pearl is no longer a sunny beach and a stroll in a dream but a place where the pounding started and never stopped and where the world changed forever when the first bomb was dropped