New slippers, one unoccupied so it can be seen “in its full glory”*

*The owner’s phraseology
~ Telling the Truth, Mainly
My father, Billie Waller, volunteered for the U.S. Army early in 1941.
He served in World War II in Northern Europe. He drove onto Omaha Beach on June 19th, 1944.
He refused all promotion.
He said the coldest winter he’d ever known was the one he spent in Cologne.
He repeatedly fell for a prank played by fellow soldiers: Knowing he had lost his sense of hearing, they would signal that a bomber was approaching and run; then, when he dived into a foxhole, they laughed. When Major Yarborough, the officer he drove for, finally happened to see, and so realized that one man under his command couldn’t hear and others were endangering him, he got the one out of harm’s way and disciplined the rest (how the Major did the latter, I don’t know).
My father was sent from the front lines in Germany to spend the last months of the war as an ambulatory patient in a Paris hospital, deaf from bomb concussion.
He arrived in Dallas, where my mother was living and working, before dawn on October 23, 1945, and handed his hearing aids to his mother-in-law with instructions not to tell my mother. Mother-in-law told. After several days of yelling to make herself heard, my mother told him to get the hearing aids and wear them. He’d been afraid she wouldn’t love a deaf husband.
He gave my mother his uniforms and said, “Get rid of these.”
He kept his dog tags, some foreign coins, and a cigar holder given him by a Belgian farmer.
He delighted his mother-in-law by saying, “Oh la la!”
He had dinner ready every night when my mother got home from work. He specialized in chocolate pies topped by a mountain of meringue. Removing one from the oven, he flipped it upside-down onto the oven door and had to serve it as a pudding.
He was turned down for a job in warehousing because he was deaf (ironic, since he later worked in supply in Air Force Civil Service). He got a job in a toy store, where he sold a tricycle to a couple with a little boy. After the sale, he learned the trike was a demo, the only one the store had, and the only one it was likely to get in the foreseeable future. Having been overseas, he wasn’t familiar with shortages on the homefront. (My mother said if he had known, he’d have been tempted to sell it anyway, because he believed little boys who wanted tricycles shouldn’t have to wait.)
On May 1, his birthday, he took the day off and spent it with Yarborough (no longer Major) in Fort Worth. When he didn’t return timely for the birthday dinner she’d cooked, complete with chocolate cake with fudge icing, my mother cried and cried. She realized later, she said, laughing, that at that point, my dad had lived with Yarborough a lot longer than he’d lived with her, and that the two men probably had more in common.
After six months in Dallas, he achieved the dream that had kept him going throughout his years away. If my mother had worked for another six months, she would have had reinstatement privileges with Civil Service, but she didn’t hesitate. The San Marcos River was the only place he wanted to be, or would ever want to be. They moved to Fentress.
My mother said that of all the men she knew who served in World War II, he was the least changed. He came home and was again just Bill, with the quiet, dry sense of humor and the twinkle in his blue eyes. He put the war behind him and went on with life.
When he spoke of his service, he confined himself to people he’d known and the lighter side of daily life. While stationed in Scotland he and some friends had their pictures taken in traditional dress. He said one of the men, when changing back into uniform, forgot to take off the socks, and got back to the base wearing the photographer’s argyles.
He made a few observations: He respected General Omar Bradley but had a low opinion of Patton.
But he didn’t share stories of combat. He’d written my mother, “I’ve seen things you wouldn’t believe. I’ll tell you when I get home.” He never told.
Two remarks he made years later suggest why:
My mother told me about the first: When his brother Donald and others were talking about looting that occurred on the battlefield, my father, who’d been silent, suddenly said, “I’ve seen them cut off fingers to get rings.”
He made the second comment in my presence: My uncle’s stepson, who had served in the military but seen no combat, was looking forward to watching the movie Anzio on television. He said, “I can’t imagine hitting the beach and running into enemy fire like that.” My father replied, “There’s nowhere else to go.”
Such memories aren’t conducive to going on with life.
In 1964, when President Eisenhower’s memoir of D-Day and the Invasion was published serially in the San Antonio newspaper, he read it. Occasionally, he said, “No, that’s not quite right . . .” or, “He’s forgotten about . . .”
The one thing he couldn’t leave in the past was his deafness. The hearing aid didn’t filter out ambient noise, and he often walked out of gatherings–family get-togethers, wedding receptions, church dinners–that he would otherwise have enjoyed. He left Civil Service because his job at the time required taking sensitive, detailed information over the telephone, and he was afraid of making a mistake, which could have cost lives.
In 1967 and 1968, surgery at the VA hospital in Houston restored hearing in both of his ears and allowed him to lead a normal life.
In the summer of 1981, he finally expressed a desire to attend a reunion of the men he’d served with. An angina attack sent him to the hospital that weekend instead. He didn’t get another opportunity to see them again.
***
The cigar holder lived–and still lives–in the silver chest. I’ve known about it practically all my life and occasionally took it out and examined it when I was a child–but it took decades for me to realize its meaning. The farmer didn’t give a cigar holder to just some young man passing through; he gave it to an American GI, one among thousands he’d waited and hoped for, who was risking his life to free the Belgian people, and all of Europe, from the tyranny of Nazi Germany. The cigar holder represented gratitude, and more. In my mind’s eye, I see my my father and that farmer talking about the weather and how the crops were doing–if any arable land hadn’t been overrun by bootsoles and tanks. They’d have been speaking different languages, of course, but the language of farmers, and of friendship, is universal. And since my father was involved, they’d also have been laughing.
***
Two 50-centime Belgian coins.
Left, the profile of King Leopold II, dated 1888 or 1886.
Right, the profile of King Albert, date obscured by tarnish. Albert succeeded Leopold in 1909.
A dose of silver polish and elbow grease and more will be revealed.

The Record is glad to present in its Service Men’s Corner this week another group of five fine young men, all brothers, now in the service of their country.
These are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Waller of Fentress. An interesting and significant feature of this story is that the young men pictured here are first cousins of the five Graham brothers that were featured in a recent issue of the Record, all being in the service. Their mothers, Vida Waller and Bruce Graham, are sisters and their fathers, Ed. Graham and Frank Waller, are cousins.
The Waller brothers pictured above are as follows: Joe Waller, U. S. Navy; Pfc. Maurice Waller, overseas; Pfc. Bill Waller, Hd. Co. 32 A. B., Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania; Cpl. Donald Waller, Base Weather Station, Luke Field, Phoenix, Ariz.; Pfc. Graham Waller, Co. B. 155 Inf., Camp Shelby, Miss.
The above pictures and script appeared in the San Marcos Record of January 29th and are reproduced here by the permission of that newspaper.
Mr. and Mrs. Waller and their sons are due thanks and admiration of all Americans for the sacrifices they are making for their country.
Source: Lockhart (TX) Post Register, 1943
*****
Joe, Donald, and Graham served in the Pacific. Bill and Maurice served in Northern Europe. All returned. Bill came home deaf from bomb concussion and spent the next twenty years telling curious children that his hearing aid was a telephone. In 1967 and ’68, a new surgery being taught at the VA hospital in Houston restored his conversational hearing.
AMERICAN Y.M.C.A.
ON ACTIVE SERVICE WITH THE AMERIAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
July 23, 1918
Dear Mother and Sisters,
After a lengthy but very interesting overseas journey, we at last arrived at our point of destination. Perhaps you can imagine how proud we were to see land after a weeks ride on a crowded boat; and I want to say right here that there is no prettier country under the blue sky than that with which these people are blessed and for which they are making a sacrifice to hold. Any picture you might imagine I think would hardly do the real France justice.
The streets of the city where we landed, and through which we marched to our camp on the outskirts, was lined with old men, women and children, for that is about all there is left to welcome the soldiers.
We are comfortably located in tents now in the suburbs of a city of 100,000 population, a very pretty place. We are provided with plenty to drink, good water, I mean, plenty of good fresh meat and lots of other good things to eat. The Y.M.C.A. here, as in the states, look after our interests in the usual way. The hospital accommodations are excellent, but so far, fortunately, few of us have had to avail ourselves of their service.
Altho I have seen very little of the country as yet, I can readily see why these people are so patriotic and so willing to make sacrifice for their country; it is such a pretty and prosperous land. Picture some large & irrigated truck farm and you have an idea of the appearance of this country It is harvest time now, and the people are blessed with an abundant crop. They grow most everything there is to eat.
On the surface there is little evidence of grief or mourning on the part of these people, not withstanding the fact that most every family have lost one or more members. The women and children, for that is all you see, except occasionally a few return from the front on a short furlough, are always up and going, and the spirit of self-sacrifice and determination is such that defeat for them is out of the question.
Mama, we are quite a ways from the firing line now and as yet have seen little of the real war that you read of in the states; yet we are close enough to see the effects and to feel that not all of the paper reports are fiction. I don’t know just how long we shall remain here. But for my part, I am anxious to get into the very thick of it all.
Our branch of the service affords us an opportunity so see a great deal of the country–to see history in the making, to learn the custom and characteristics of the people first hand.
Now Mama, regardless of how close to the front we are placed, or what kind of work we shall be called upon to do you should not worry in the least about me but rather be proud that you can contribute in this way, what little I may be able to do, to this cause, and share with me the praise, if any, and the blessing that all who serve, keeping in mind the high ideal for which we are here, shall receive.
I have never been in better spirits nor in better health. The weather is fine, very similar to N.Y. Over coats are comfortable at times. I shall not write more now for I don’t know how much will pass, and too there is some poor censor that will have to read this with scores of others. Take good care of yourself, and give my love to all the family.
With lots of love to you and sisters from
Your loving Son
Henry
*
Henry Waller was my grandfather’s younger brother. What I know about him:
He was born in 1887, in Guadalupe County, Texas. His parents were Ophelia Ann Graham Waller and Edward Pettus Waller. He served as either superintendent or principal of the rural school at Staples, Texas, near his family’s farm.
Thirty years old when the United States entered World War I, he enlisted in the army and served overseas. A transcription of a letter he sent to his mother and his sisters, Ethel and Jessie, appears above.
He was already drinking to excess when he enlisted. By the time the war was over, his alcoholism had progressed so far that he refused to return home–because, he said, he didn’t want his mother to see what he’d become.
He lived the rest of his life in New York City. I have a snapshot of him standing with friends, wearing a straw katie and looking well and happy.
I don’t know how he supported himself, but there came a time when he was unable to do so, and when his family in Texas could no longer support him adequately. In 1933, he committed suicide. He is buried at the Masonic Cemetery in Prairie Lea, Texas.
How much his experience in combat contributed to his alcoholism, I don’t know.
In the original post, I asked whether anyone could identify the poem beginning
“Oh, somewhere there are people who
Have nothing in the world to do
But sit among the Pyrenees . . .”
Author N, M, Cedeno provided the answer: “Midsummer Melancholy,” by Margaret Fishback (1900-1985).
She also provided a link to the entire (?) poem on The Berkshire Edge
***
I heard this poem recited on Anyone for Tennyson?, a series that ran on PBS from 1976-78. I haven’t been able to find it online.
If you know the author and/or a book in which the poem appears, please leave the name/title in a comment.