The Last Doolittle Raider Poem by John F. McCullagh

The Last Doolittle Raider



He flew with Doolittle against Japan
on the eighteenth of April in Forty two.
Eighty brave volunteers made that flight.
but their numbers dwindled down to you.

In postwar reunions these men would meet
And toast the fallen gone before
From silver goblets with their names inscribed,
these heroes of that distant war.

Then, when there were only two,
A vintage bottle was opened at last.
You gave the toast to vanished friends;
The faces and names from your storied past.

Now you, too, have been laid to rest
In old Marse Robert's hallowed fields.
Once more you hold the bombers yoke
And lift off Hornet's pitching deck.
You rise toward grey shrouded skies
upon a fearsome enterprise.

Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Topic(s) of this poem: war memories,history
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
Richard Cole, age 103, has died. The last of the Doolittle raiders
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