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Subject: May 5, 2007 - Storytime Tapestry Contributors: B.J. Cassady; Gary Jacobson - May05, 2007



Storytime Tapestry Newsletter

The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural awareness around the world.

May 5, 2007

 

Today’s Announcements

 

Happy birthday wishes go out to

Terry Ploeckelmann: raphapublishing@yahoo.com

Louise Nomani:  windmill@tdstelme.net

Alicia Viola: gypsy68@mhcable.com

 

 

Donations are needed to help with the operating expenses of running the newsletter and to keep Storytime Tapestry the quality newsletter you are so accustomed to.   

 

Please note that Storytime Tapestry is a free newsletter to members and there will never be a cost for the newsletter. Donations are purely voluntary and no member should ever feel guilty for not making a donation at this time.

 

 

Today’s Stories

~**~**~

There Are Places We Should Never Go

B. J. Cassady

There are places we never should go,
There are people we should never be around
and there are situations we should avoid.
 
Combine the three and you have disaster.
 
The opposite applies.
 
There are people we need to be friends with
Places that draw us
and situations that call us
combine the three and we have a win win situation.
 
Examples...
 
A rough bar Saturday night and a bad part of town or
a group of friends hanging out having a great time at
a R&B joint in a nice part of town.  One will possible
result in violence, one will built memories.
 
Take a walk down the streets of a bad part of town
during a weekend night or...take a walk with some
loved ones in a dog park.  Visit your children/grandchilden
in school or visit some homies in the slammer..
 
To take from others or to give as in donating time
via church activities, Red Cross, Project Read, etc.
 
We are Givers or Takers.  Which are you?
 
choices...choices
 
As for me and my house ...
 
I choose and have chosen my path.
 
BJ Cassady

bj.Cassady@af-group.com

 

 

Poetry Corner

~**~**~

 

G'day mates of Storytime Tapestry ... I sent this the 25th to honor Anzac Day, a commemoration for soldiers of Australia and New Zealand, on Anzac day, in tribute to the good men of Long Tan, a historical battle fought by the Aussies and Kiwis in Vietnam. I write in honour and fair dinkum tribute to Anzac (Australian/New Zealand soldiers), brothers-in-arms, dinki di (truly) mates in battle fronts around the world. But apparently yahoo, in its infinite wisdom, dropped the ball.   Though a Yank, I was challenged by Terry Fulton not too long ago, a right amiable bloke who became a good friend, to write a poem concerning the battle at Long Tan Rubber Plantation in Vietnam

 

I've learned a lot from Terry, including how to write as an Aussie bushman, through my exploring into the world down under.  From the way Terry describes his home, it is a veritable garden paradise in Australia's wild and wonderful land, full of diversity and extremes ... unbelievable!  So with brotherly love and a great deal of honour to my brother gunners down under, I present:

 

Long Tan, Vietnam...August 1966
The song playing on my site is "I Was Only 19," by John Schuman and Redgum.

Long Tan

http://namtour.com/longtan.html

by Gary Jacobson © April 2006


Come away, Mates, come away
Raise a tinny to brave men honoured here today
Salute men of Long Tan’s matchless bravery
Sing solemn adoration's praises with heartbreak balladry.
Hear bagpipes moaning sonorously low
As heartfelt homage to blokes of courage bestow.

For this day men of
Australia proved dauntless
Forever kept in brother’s dinky di spirit ageless
August 1966, gone to flamin' battle’s sacred oblation
Forged into darkning Long Tan rubber plantation
From the sixth battalion, Royal Australian Regiment
D Company from dusty Nui Dat was sent...

So far from home the Long Tan,
from
Gibraltar Range and Hanging Rock
From Mulga Scrub to high Nowendoc
Weaving among Tumut trees, a keen Talbingo breeze
So far the
Australian Alps, with cold Kosciusko nights
The
Nullabor Caves with Augusta's crystal stalactites
Scenes painted forever in Anzac eyes...
Aussie warriours who do combat now for the victor’s prize.

Royal Australian Regiment’s 6th Battalion proved pesky pests
That presumptuous Vietcong’s malignant reign arrests
Got right up their nose, interrupting ruddy dominance
Gave a buggered frown to horn in on the arrogance
On VC Commander Nguyen Than Hong’s countenance
Though he outgunned us twenty to one with formidable forces
Viet Cong fifth Division, plus NVA regular defenses.

Flanked by agent orange's flamin' noxious balm
On one side .. and on the other, murderous Vietcong
D company drew the card to march when VC mortared the calm
Discordant like a plaintive didgeridoo song
Starting the beaucoup bloody wrong

TheVC had plotted a right dastardly little row
In the rubber plantation in the heartland of Vung Tau.
For diggers who'd not seen many a muster
Certainly not many like this blood and gutbuster
Aussie swag mates were new and bricky green
Gung-ho na?ve to the combat fray scene

Sent on a walkabout 'round Charlie’s back yard
Turning Long Tan into a flamin' boneyard
Bloody far from Wattie Creek, the Red Road far behind them
Rousting violent men who've seen duty clear to kill them
Reunite them with dust what made them
But before the enemy, Anzac's vowed they would not bow
Before the bloody barney brawl cow.

Yet this explosive anger twas no bullock in the bush
Diabolic battle chased from this estate its peaceful hush
For truly said, there be real monsters here
Armed with caustic hatreds roiling fear
Pouring in, as men who know war solemnly predicted
Pulsing hearts beating like an adrenaline junky addicted.

Like restless winds off the
Tasman Sea blew in the bloody row
Came a battle most dinky day...
Terrible war weapons roaring in bloody conflict
Fearing death too soon would gory punishment surely inflict
Remember Gallipoli, brave Aussies cried
As all around them brave diggers died.

The enemy came pouring in human wave assaults, again and again
Crashing, slashing through steaming torrents of monsoonal rain
Relentlessly maddening, slogging in tenaciously teeming crud
Charging through blankets of mist 'n sticky mud
Fire-eating true life killers, the flamin' Vietcong
The real thing, unlike mates training at Shoalwater Bay
We'd routed them, jokingly coined “Queensland Cong.”

Virulent VC wanted to shut diggers from Oz down
To lay brave Aussies under the ground
But Aussie hearts held firm, for their mates to inspire
Weathering the virulent VC mob's mortar fire
Fighting off enraged VC hoping Aussies to expire
Lay them atop a burning funeral pyre.

Where hoary death's a fair dinkum chance
Lads lives held in galah war’s balance
Men teetered on the edge of life absurd
Far, far away from the jackass laughter of kookaburra bird
So skewer yourselves together, diggers
Keep your ammo dry, your finger on your triggers.

Do not squander life my brothers
Hold fast and go hard, like there be no others.
To this dustup, malicious bullets eschew
Diggers, muster up all the courage that’s in you
Pump up your bravery, make strong your sinew
To stay with you mates, till this bloody fight is through.

Far from spreading Wilga tree, the rubber plant battle raged
Blokes penned down, without escape from combat caged
Remembering a gentler life under snow gum and eucalypts
These proud men in slouch hats, many just conscripts
Moving forward under intense enemy fire fighting
Brave mates in mud and blood and tears horribly dying...

Marching bravely into Long Tan, diggers do as they were told
Sadly, some will never have bloody chance of ever growing old
Still dreaming of a land where coolahbas are still growing
In this bloody game of dice that danger bestowing
Yet hearing back in Nui Dat a loud thumping played
A rock concert for troops arrayed...

"Col Joye" and "Little Pattie"
Performed as staccato gunfire rained in combat sortie
Belting out, He's My Blonde Headed, Stompie Wompie,
Heard in the Long Tan with a beat kinda bumpy
Thundering it's sound as men breathed their last
Death flowing in a hundred sticky-wickets fast.

This Long Tan gambit put a real damper to festivities
Crashed dreams of dusty Nui Dat, with Long Tan banalities
Mates fighting for their lives with brickbats’n missiles
SLRs fending off Charlie’s nightmarish proposals.
Each step could be your last step to a warrior’s final slumbers
Think about it'n you'd go bloody bonkers...

Where sweet-and-sour smells with moldering rot combine
Swirling in Old Nick’s bloody pungent harvest time.
Blokes keep'er head down, hide like a bleedin' wallaby
Lest Charlie’s lullaby find ye
Here a stirring in war’s cantankerous stew
In the muddy, bloody ‘roo.

Resolute Aussies orchestrated VC obliteration
With effective infantry, artillery, armour and aviation
While the VC, those churlish little knaves
Assaulted Anzac bulwarks in dinky dau human waves.
Beacoup Aussies, with American and
New Zealand assistance
Decimated in concert a bitter VC resistance.

Anzac mates tricked belligerent VC
Made them hesitate by brazen tactics, see
Made them think they faced a whole battalion force,
Xin loi, only a company of Aussies fought there, of course
Still they suffered twenty-four mates wounded,
eighteen killed in the Long Tan animosities
While Killing five hundred Charlies,
wounding seven hundred fifty.

Brothers gave all here ... earning sweet grave’s berth
A single man from Cunderdin, a married mechanic from Perth
A mate from Dalby, a television cameraman from Tamworth
A farmhand from Thurgoona, a butcher from Brisbane
A married electrician from St Mary’s, a mate from Adelaide
A lad hailing from Wellington, a clerk from Launceston.

Privates to Second Lieutenants, no man among them wished to die
Leaving folks at home so teary, nothing to do but cry...
For blokes from Bendingo, Toowoomba, Goondiwindi
A Ballarat clerk, Wallsend station hand, a Postman from Sydney
Fought on this gray looking blustery day
Clouds down among them, down 'n dirty in battle's queue.

 

http://namtour.com/longtan.html

 

 Thank You! 

Gary
Gary Jacobson

jacobs@atcnet.net


"Vietnam Picture Tour," http://namtour.com/namtour.html A walk in "the park" grunts called
Vietnam, with the 1st Air Cavalry on comba t patrol. Experience chilling reality to leave the sweet and sour taste of "the Nam" pungent on your tongue, the smell of "the Nam" acrid in your nostrils, and textures of "the Nam" imbedded in you as though you were walking beside me in combat.

My poignant poems directory, pictures and artwork to show the essence and feeling of war on young "boys next door," See some of my newest poems here, along with many golden oldies:
http://namtour.com/nampoemsNpix.html

"Realm Of Poetry," Poems of love and romance, spirituality and meditation, Golden Oldies, comedy, Quests of the regal knight Richard Lionheart to the crusades and seeking the Holy Grail, dueling dragons, frolicking fairies, and comedy ... and also links to my site of riding that bestial ogre called war ... http://namtour.com/P/RealmOfPoetry.html

 

 

Readers Feedback

 

 Carol,
     Thank you my friend.  It is always so good seeing my articles on Storytime.  I am glad too that I was in such good company today.  Bill's love for his dogs always shines through his writing
and Cynthia's poems are always a touch of Spring.  Wishing you every joy, Joe

 

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Angels on earth, they exist they are out there.  Angels come in all ages, shapes and sizes, civil status, and religion.  Their nature is love and their purpose is giving to the less fortunate of this world.  Storytime Tapestry angels are no exception.  These angels are loyal members who have contributed to the upkeep of Storytime Tapestry newsletter so that Storytime Tapestry can continue come to your email box 350 days of the year.

 

Here is our Storytime Tapestry Angels: Also, I would like to thank those of you who chose to be a silent angel and gave an anonymous donation to keep Storytime Tapestry up and running.

 

 

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<< May04, 2007 - Beyond The Mirror - A Bill Allin Friday Column May06, 2007 - Storytime Tapestry : Tannia's interview with Jo Linsdell >>
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