Saturday, December 7, 2019

Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day 2019: The Fateful Day




Always remember.   Never forget.


 American WWII veteran Fremont Sawade with his poem.
(Charlie Neuman)




The Fateful Day

'Twas the day before that fateful day

December Sixth I think they say.

When leave trucks passed Pearl Harbor clear

The service men perched in the rear.

No thought gave they, of things to come.

For them, that day, all work was done.

In waters quiet of Pearl Harbor Bay,

The ships serene, at anchor lay.

Nor did we give the slightest thought

Of treacherous deeds by the yellow lot.

Those men whose very acts of treason,

Are done with neither rhyme nor reason.

For if we knew what was in store

We ne're would leave that day before.

For fun and drink to forget the war

Of Britain, Europe, and Singapore.

For all of us there was no fear

This time of peace and Christmas cheer.

Forget the axiom, might is right,

Guardians of Peace, were we that night.

We passed the sailors in cabs galore,

Those men in white who came ashore.

But some will ne're be seen again,

In care-free fun, those sailor men.

The Sabbath Day dawned bright and clear,

A brand of fire ore the lofty spear,

Of Diamond Head, Hawaii's own.

A picture itself that can't be shown,

Unless observed with naked eye,

That makes one look, and stop, and sigh.

What more could lowly humans ask

To start upon their daily task.

The men asleep in barracks late,

Knew no war, that morning at eight.

The planes on fields, their motors cold,

Like sheep asleep among the fold.

The ships at anchor with turbines stilled,

Their crews below in hammocks filled.

And faint, as tho it were a dream

A sound steels on upon this scene.

A drone of many red tipped things,

The Rising Sun upon their wings.

Those who saw would not believe,

And those that heard could not conceive.

A single shocking, thundering roar,

Followed by another and many more.

To rob the sleep from weary eyes,

Or close forever those that died,

A hot machine gun's chattering rattle,

Mowed men down like herds of cattle.

A bomb destroys an air plane hangar,

The planes within will fly no more

Bombs  explode upon a ship,

Blasting men into the deep,

To sink without the slightest thought

Of what brought on this hell they caught.

What seems like years, the horrible remains,

Blasting men and ships and planes.

And just as quick as they had come,

Away they went, their foul deeds done.

To leave the burning wreckage here,

The scorching hulks of dead ships there.

And blasted forms of dying men

Alive in hell, to die again.

At night the skies were all but clear,

The rosy glow of a white hot bier,

Showed on clouds the havoc wrought,

And greedy flames the men still fought.

But from the ruins arose this cry,

That night from those who did not die,

"Beware Japan we'll take eleven,

For every death of December Seven".

And from that day there has arisen,

A cry for vengeance, in storms they're driven.

This fateful day among the ages.

Shall stand out red in Hist'ry's pages.

Those men whom homefolk held so dear,

Will be avenged, have no fear.

And if their lives they gave in vain,

Pray, I too, may not remain.


The Attack On Pearl Harbor
Sunday, December 7, 1941
Always remember. Never forget.



"The Fateful Day"
Fremont Augustus "Cap" Sawade
August 18, 1920-February 12, 2016
American veteran of WWII and an
eye witness to the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor, the morning of
Sunday, December 7, 1941.

Thank you, Sir, for your courageous service to
our nation and for my freedom.
May you rest in peace.

"I will dwell in Your tabernacle forever;
let me find refuge and trust in 
the shadow of Your wings."
Psalm 61:14






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