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Poet's Corner

Saltwater Transfusion


(in the first person)

By: James E. (Whitey) Stidham

USS Goodrich (DD/DDR-831)

 

I’m tired of school, but I’m nobody’s fool

I have my whole future to face

No jobs to be found, just hanging around

I’ve gotta get out of this place

 

I’m a little nervous about the service

With the draft I’m taking a chance

Uncle Sam needs me, but I’d rather it be

My choice of time and branch

 

The recruiter’s well versed and paints a rehearsed

Picture of glory and fame

Exciting war ships, adventurous trips

Where do I sign my name

 

Long hair and civvies, what are skivvies

We’re a sorry group of young punks

Through the main gate, hurry up and wait

Hours to be in your bunks

 

The haircut I dread, eyes straight ahead

Tighten up that line

Follow directions, short arm inspections

I must have been out of my mind

 

Drilling and classes, no liberty passes

Taps is the favorite tune

We’re pushed to the brink, it’s swim or sink

Reveille comes too soon

 

At last the elation of proud graduation

Marching to Anchors Aweigh

My orders in hand, I’ll board a tin can

I’m anxious to get underway

 

My first impression is one of depression

Reporting aboard my new home

I’m apprehensive, and have a sense of

Being very alone

 

We roll with the swells with pipe and bells

To direct our daily routine

Of watches we stand as we jockey this can

To places yet to be seen

As I strike for the rate of Boatswains Mate

There are dues I’m expected to pay

Decks and rails and brushes and pails

Of red lead and Battleship gray

 

While I hammer the rust and wire brush

The layers of blistered old paint

The salt and spray that cause the decay

Are cursed with tired complaint

 

Mid-rats and crackers, practical factors

Boondocks and dungarees

Mess cook and laundry, my life’s in a quandary

A tin can striker at sea

 

Finally today I can proudly say

It was worth the work and wait

For my Seaman’s stripe, my shiny new pipe

And insignia of Boatswains Mate

 

I do my best at studies and tests

For my future I have to believe

I’m determined concerning on-the-job learning

And the crow I’ll sew on my sleeve

 

Three months at sea, can it really be

Another cruise is done

As we steam through the night, we focus our sight

On horizons for lights and home

 

I give a quick call to Mom, Dad and all

And tell them my future is clear

I’ve made a decision, not sure of the reason

But I plan to re-up next year

 

As time has gone by, I’ve discovered that I

Am proud to do what I do

I’ve come a long way and now I can say

I’m a sailor through and through

 

It has something to do with a tin can crew

The feeling is hard to explain

Camaraderie of mates, steel deck plates

And saltwater in my veins


    

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