Poem: Another Lucky Break
This is a poem about my grandfather, George Martin. He was a Merchant Marine during WWII.
Another Lucky Break
Before we knew, he was the Vaseline Kid
A southpaw, a featherweight, in the Atlantic Fleet
Before that, he sold newspapers on the corner
Slouched in his chair, his teeth in a shot glass
He greeted us after school: Put up ya dukes
He gave us Cokes and Hershey’s Kisses
Not much to look at, a nose a Gibraltar of pulp
Loose fitting skin covered with blurry tattoos
Despite his fragility, he offered safe-passage
Evenings after Cronkite, he fired up his Zippo
Torching the end of a tiparillos, with supper he’d
Tell us a tanker burned forever even as she sank
He was ready to spin yarns about Esso fuelers
He pointed to dusty shores on the Oriental rug
And in a trance hollered torpedo starboard side
Striking between No. 4 tank and the pump room
A blessing as ballast put them on an even keel
Something kept those souls within the convoy
He started again: Don’t mess up a lucky break…
With a giant gash amidships, S.B. Hunt listed as
A U-Boat vanished in the deep, its future grave
We fidgeted on the divan selfishly wanting more
But a hacking cough hijacked his body and we waited
We stared into his dark sockets finding gentle eyes
His daughters a closer foe quickly ended our liberty
Until ordered to leave we sat with our ancient mariner
Never realizing how many lucky breaks he gave us
Steve Herring’s poetry has appeared in Poetry Quarterly and the Aurorean. Steve earned his Master of Arts degree at Northeastern University and taught literature at the United States Military Academy. He’s a New England transplant now living in Arlington, Va. He enjoys hiking, jazz, and classic films. Steve can be reached by email at
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