Fifty Eight Thousand Poem by John F. McCullagh

Fifty Eight Thousand



Uncle Sam sat down across from me and placed his satchel on the floor.
It was time to pay the piper; that is God's immutable law.
I tapped my bony finger, impatient to begin.
"That will be fifty eight thousand, Sam, starting with Tonkin."

From his satchel, that seemed bottomless, Sam produced the cash.
"Start counting! " I demanded, as I drooled over his stash.
He started pilling Franklins up on the table there between us.
Each "C" note meant one hundred dead Due to McNamara's genius.

Fathers and sons had fallen; young men by the score.
Just think of the girls they never kissed; the children never born.
Uncle Sam doled out the bills until his thumbs were sore
When he finished I took out my Scythe and swept them on the floor.

I saw Sam's look of horror at my eyeless, nose less face.
He had counted out a treasure that he knew can't be replaced.
"It was a Pleasure doing business." Oh, how I despised that man!
Still I was certain that we'd meet many more times after Vietnam.

Friday, August 17, 2018
Topic(s) of this poem: war and peace
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
58,220 American men and women, my fellow boomers, died during the years of the Vietnam war. Here I imagine Uncle Sam settling the bill with an unusual accountant.
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