Atomic Bomb - Triumph or Tragedy
Atomic Bomb - Triumph or Tragedy
Atomic Bomb - Triumph or Tragedy
Nagasaki
HISTORY.COM EDITORS
August 9, the day of the Nagasaki atomic bombing, I tried to reach home but did not arrive until
the dead of night.
Are they there?
Under the fallen debris
Under the light of the moon.
The following day I found my seriously injured wife and the corpses of two of my children at the
roadside and my wife told me about the death of the children (one and four years old).
Knowing only recently how to smile,
The baby smiles, dying,
At her mother’s breast.
Left on the ground
For lack of any shelter
The children attract swarms of flies.
Sucking a stick on the brink of death,
He says, this is good,
This is a piece of sugar cane.
My eldest son, a 7th grade student, dies in the air-raid shelter.
Under the burning sun
I set out in search
Of my son’s last earthly drink.
Creeping to his mother’s side
https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/bombing-of-hiroshima-and-nagasaki#section_1
He smiles
And draws a final breath.
His last night of earthly form
He lies next to his mother
The moonlight touching his face.
The moonlight finds them dead,
Two outside
And one inside the shelter.
On August 11, I gathered wood to cremate my children.
A dragonfly
Stops for a moment
On the corpses of three siblings.
The fire rages and
Engulfs two children
Pressing up beside their older brother.
I collected the ashes early the next morning.
The morning mist
Washes over the ashes
Of three siblings side by side.
How lamentable
The ashes, like flower petals,
Of a seven-month old infant.
My wife died on August 13 (age 36).
The tomato in my kimono sleeve
Is for Hiro-Chan, says my wife
As she draws her last breath.
I cremated my wife on August 15, the day that Japan announced its surrender.
After losing everything
I stand holding
Four atomic bomb certificates.
Arousing myself from the summer grass
I stoke the fire
Cremating my wife.
The words of surrender
Mingle with the flames
Of my wife’s funeral pyre.
https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/bombing-of-hiroshima-and-nagasaki#section_1