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    On the Horizon

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    “I had bad luck with all my boys,” she said.

      Silas Wainwright

      Popular kid, Silas. Played football

      in high school. Joined everything.

      He wanted to be a doctor.

      But times were tough.

      And Silas was the oldest

      of eleven children.

      No college for him.

      He worked on the family farm.

      Then, at twenty, he enlisted.

      The navy made him a

      pharmacist’s mate.

      He learned to do minor surgery

      It was as close as he could get

      to medicine.

      Back home, in his

      small New York town,

      friends got Christmas cards

      that year from Silas.

      He’d mailed them nine days

      before he died.

      8:15, December 1941

      Frank Cabiness, PFC,

      survived. From his station

      in the mainmast high above,

      he looked down

      and saw that half of his ship

      was gone.

      His hands were burned.

      Not like his shipmates’,

      charred by flaming oil;

      his were friction burns. Grasping

      ropes and ladders, he slid down eighty feet

      to save himself that morning.

      His watch (his children have it still)

      stopped at 8:15.

      Time doesn’t matter now, to Frank.

      At eighty-six, he returned to his ship.

      Divers took his ashes down

      and placed them in the fourth gun turret,

      where he would rest with his shipmates.

      A bugler played taps

      as they took the urn and dove.

      The Fourth Turret

      One by one, the divers

      have carried their ashes below

      and placed them in the fourth turret.

      John Anderson—remember him?

      The one who lost his identical twin?

      John reached the age of ninety-eight.

      Many, many years had passed.

      Remembering his brother’s fate,

      he asked to be with Jake at last.

      Child on a Beach

      I was a child who played in the sand,

      a little shovel in my hand;

      I pranced and giggled. I was three.

      The ship sailed past. I didn’t see.

      I wonder, now that time’s gone by,

      about that day: the sea, the sky . . .

      the day I frolicked in the foam,

      when Honolulu was my home.

      I think back to that sunlit day

      when I was young, and so were they.

      If I had noticed? If I’d known?

      Would each of us be less alone?

      I’ve traveled many miles since then—

      around the world, and back again;

      I’ve learned that there will always be

      things we miss, that we don’t see

      on the horizon. Things beyond.

      And yet there is a lasting bond

      between us, linking each to each:

      Boys on a ship. Child on a beach.

      Pearl Harbor

      triolet

      Time will not age them. They are boys still:

      young in that December, and young today.

      Though others of us falter, shrink, fall ill,

      time will not age them. They are boys still.

      We’ll pause, remember, grieve for them, until

      memories fade. But though our hair turns gray,

      time will not age them. They are boys still:

      young in that December, and young today.

      PART 2.

      Another Horizon

      At 8:15 in the morning, on August 6, 1945, an American plane dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima in southern Japan. The city was destroyed. Some eighty thousand people died that day, and thousands more, afflicted with radiation sickness, died in the following weeks, months, and years.

      Ultimately, the atomic bomb brought about the end of World War II.

      Names

      Code-named “Little Boy,” the bomb

      was placed aboard. The men were calm.

      They flew six hours. The skies were clear.

      They’d arm the bomb when they drew near.

      The plane was named Enola Gay.

      It carried a whole crew that day:

      George. Tom. Wyatt. Joe.

      Dutch. Jake. Six hours to go.

      Two Roberts. Morris. Richard. Deak.

      They waited, watching; didn’t speak

      until the order came: Deploy.

      Time to release Little Boy

      At 8:15 they let it fall.

      The bomber pilot’s name was Paul.

      He’d named the airplane for his mom.

      It carried twelve men and the bomb.

      Six hours back. No talk, still. None.

      Except: My God. What have we done?

      Japanese Morning

      In a small town called Tabuse

      on August sixth, a summer day,

      a little boy, Koichi Seii,

      felt a shudder in the earth

      and saw the sky

      change.

      From Hiroshima, miles away,

      beyond the hills, beside the bay,

      on August sixth, a summer day,

      Koichi-san perceived the birth

      of something

      strange.

      Is this how it ends? The world? This way?

      On August sixth? A summer day?

      Morning light? A boy at play?

      It could. It might. It may.

      The Cloud

      They likened it, later,

      because of its shape,

      to a mushroom.

      Think of mushrooms:

      fragile,

      ascending and unfurling

      after a rain,

      rising on ragged stems

      through damp moss.

      Think of this cloud:

      savage,

      ripping sky and earth

      and future,

      spawning death

      with its spore.

      Afterward

      haiku

      White light, whirling cloud

      Next a strange ghostly silence

      Then startling black rain

      Takeo

      School was about to begin

      for Takeo and his friends.

      As they waited, they played

      hide-and-seek. Takeo was It.

      He covered his eyes and counted,

      Ichi, ni,

      Isan, shi . . .

      A blinding light came. A roar. A vibration.

      And after that, silence.

      A soldier, searching for survivors,

      heard his cries, dug through rubble,

      found him, picked him up, carried him

      through the silent, ruined city.

      He heard his name. Takeo-san! Takeo-san!

      “It’s my daddy!” he said to the soldier.

      There, on the bridge, in the silence,

      he was placed in his father’s arms.

      Later, he remembered his father’s tears,

      and how he had bowed to the soldier,

      whispering, “Thank you,” over and over.

      The Red Tricycle

      Soon four years old! A big boy!

      Shinichi Tetsutani

      played that morning,

      riding his red tricycle.

      When his parents found him,

      he was still gripping the

      handlebar. He was so proud

      of his red tricycle.

      Shin-chan, they called him.

      They buried him in the garden,

      and with him, they buried

      his red tricycle.

      He had called it his friend.

      Tomodachi.

      Tram Girls

      The country had been at war for a long time.

    &nbs
    p; Most of the men had gone to serve.

      Teenagers were called upon to fill their jobs.

      High school girls learned to operate

      the trams that moved through the city.

      They felt useful and proud.

      Schoolboys thought that Tram 101

      had the best-looking girls.

      They always waited for that one.

      None of that mattered

      when it happened—the bright light,

      the explosion,

      the engines fell silent.

      Akira Ishida thought it was her fault,

      that she had done something wrong,

      caused an accident.

      Then she looked to the street,

      where crowds had been walking.

      There was no one there. No one left.

      They were vaporized.

      She was a young girl with

      a singed uniform, and

      a lifetime

      of nightmares.

      Sadako Sasaki

      Legend says that if you fold one thousand

      paper cranes, a wish will be granted.

      Sadako believed that.

      She folded and folded.

      She was two

      on that August morning,

      at home when the bomb fell,

      and she seemed uninjured.

      But the black rain fell on her,

      carrying radiation.

      She folded and folded,

      there in the hospital.

      She was twelve when she died,

      surrounded by small paper birds.

      Chieko Suetomo

      Chieko survived.

      Later, she found her doll,

      the Shirley Temple doll that her father

      had brought her from a trip to the USA.

      The doll’s curls were singed,

      her pink dress charred.

      But her dimpled face

      still smiled, unscarred.

      The Tricycle

      They had buried it with him,

      the red tricycle

      that he called his friend.

      And forty years passed.

      He was three.

      Now he would be a man.

      When his parents felt ready,

      his father, old now, dug in the garden.

      Gently they took his small bones

      and moved them to a family grave.

      His friend, the tricycle?

      It rests now in a museum.

      8:15, August 1945

      Shinji Mikamo was helping his father

      that morning.

      He remembered that it was a hot day.

      He was up on the roof.

      He had raised his arm to wipe the sweat

      from his forehead, when he saw

      the blinding flash.

      His father had just called to him

      to stop daydreaming.

      Was this part of a dream?

      Then came a thundering roar,

      and he was thrown under the collapsing house.

      Two months later, at last

      able to walk again, Shinji left

      the hospital and made his way home,

      looking for his father.

      He never saw him again.

      But he found, in the ruins,

      his father’s watch. 8:15, it said.

      Hiroshima

      triolet

      The cloud appeared over the distant hill,

      blossoming like strange new flowers in spring,

      opening, growing. But the world was still.

      When the cloud appeared over the distant hill,

      silence had fallen. There were no sounds until

      rain came. Not true rain, but black drops falling

      from the cloud that appeared over a distant hill,

      blossoming like strange new flowers in spring.

      PART 3.

      Beyond the Horizons

      After we left Hawaii, I lived with my mother and my sister and brother in a small Pennsylvania town throughout World War II. My father was gone for most of the war. For many of those months, he served on the hospital ship Hope. Then he found himself on an island called Tinian. He didn’t know this—it was very secret—but on that island, they loaded the atomic bomb into the plane that would fly to Hiroshima.

      After the war ended, my dad remained in Japan, on the staff of the hospital in Tokyo. Finally, when I was eleven, we joined him there. We went by ship from New York—down through the Panama Canal, then up the coast of California, stopping for other passengers in San Francisco, and finally across the Pacific Ocean.

      It was a very long trip. When we arrived, my father met us and drove us to our new home in Tokyo. On the way, he whispered to me that he had a surprise waiting for me there.

      It was a green bicycle.

      Meiji

      So much had been destroyed.

      Some places were rubble.

      But near my home, in Shibuya,

      I would ride my bicycle to the

      Great Torii of Meiji Shrine.

      Inside the temple grounds,

      ancient trees still stood.

      People walked slowly

      and were quiet.

      Beyond the walls,

      the sounds of the city continued.

      The rubble remained.

      But within that gate,

      everything was hushed

      and unbroken.

      After That Morning

      After the August morning

      when the bright light

      seared Hiroshima

      into nothingness,

      Koichi Seii, now eight,

      had left his home

      where the sky and air

     

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