The
embers glowed
softly, and in
their dim
light,
I gazed round
the room and I
cherished the
sight.
My wife was
asleep, her
head on my
chest,
My daughter
beside me,
angelic in
rest
Outside the
snow fell, a
blanket of
white,
transforming
the yard to a
winter
delight.
The
sparkling
lights in the
tree I
believe,
Completed the
magic that was
Christmas Eve
My eyelids
were heavy, my
breathing was
deep,
Secure and
surrounded by
love, I would
sleep,
In perfect
contentment,
or so it would
seem,
So I
slumbered,
perhaps I
started to
dream.
The
sound wasn't
loud, and it
wasn't too
near,
But I opened
my eyes when
it tickled my
ear.
Perhaps just a
cough, I
didn't quite
know,
Standing
out in the
cold and the
dark of the
night,
A lone figure
stood his face
weary and
tight.
A soldier, I
puzzled, some
twenty years
old,
Perhaps a
Marine,
huddled here
in the cold.
Alone in the
dark, he
looked up and
smiled,
Standing watch
over me, and
my wife and my
child.
"What
are you
doing?" I
asked without
fear,
"Come in this
moment, it's
freezing out
here!
Put down your
pack; brush
the snow from
your sleeve,
You should be
at home on a
cold Christmas
Eve!"
For barely a
moment I saw
his eyes
shift,
Away from the
cold and the
snow blown in
drifts,
To
the window
that danced
with a warm
fire's light.
Then he sighed
and he said
"Its really
all right,
I'm out here
by choice. I'm
here every
night."
"It's
my duty to
stand at the
front of the
line,
That separates
you from the
darkest of
times.
No
one had to ask
or beg or
implore,
I'm proud to
stand here
like my
fathers
before.
My Gramps died
at Pearl on a
day in
December."
Then he
sighed,
"That's a
Christmas Gram
always
remembers."
"My
dad stood his
watch in the
jungles of '
Nam ',
And now it is
my turn and
so, here I am.
I've
not seen my
own son in
more than a
while,
But my wife
sends me
pictures; he's
sure got her
smile."
Then he bent
and he
carefully
pulled from
his bag,
The red,
white, and
blue... an
American flag.
"I
can live
through the
cold and the
being alone,
Away from my
family, my
house and my
home
I
can stand at
my post
through the
rain and the
sleet,
I can sleep in
a foxhole with
little to eat.
I can carry
the weight of
killing
another,
Or lay down my
life for my
sister or
brother,
Who stand at
the front
against any
and all
To ensure for
all time that
this flag will
not fall."
"So
go back
inside," he
said, "Harbor
no fright,
Your family is
waiting and
I'll be all
right."
"But isn't
there
something I
can do, at the
least?
Give you
money," I
asked, "Or
prepare you a
feast?
It seems all
too little for
all that
you've done,
for being away
from your wife
and your son."
Then
his eye welled
a tear that
held no
regret,
"Just tell us
you love us,
and never
forget
To fight for
our rights
back at home
while we're
gone,
To stand your
own watch, no
matter how
long
For when we
come home,
either
standing or
dead,
To know you
remember we
fought and we
bled
Is payment
enough, and
with that we
will trust,
that we
mattered to
you as you
mattered to
us."
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