David D. Duncan이 찍은 한국전쟁(2)
[Korea, June 1950.]" Yankee Nomad
September 1950.
[Korea, September 1950.]" This Is War!
[Korea, September 1950.]" This Is War!
[Korea, September 1950.]" This Is War!
Korea, September 1950.
[Seoul, Korea, September 1950.]" This Is War!
"Dawn was just over the horizon. A Marine . . . kept prodding with his spoon, trying to break loose a single, frost-coated bean from the others in his can. He could neither move it nor long continue holding the spoon between his gloved but almost rigid fingers. He found one, and slowly raised it to his mouth. He stood unmoving, waiting for it to thaw. When asked what he would have wanted if he could have had any wish, he continued to stand motionless, with empty eyes. Then his lips began to open . . . [and] his eyes went up into the graying sky, and he said, 'Give me Tomorrow.' [Korea, December 1950.]" This Is War!, p. 144.
[On the march from the Changjin Reservoir to the beach at Hungnam, the wounded and frozen rode.]
"The dead also rode--tied upon trucks and trailers. Behind them--the shuffle of their feet following the rising and falling beat of a tragic rhythm--walked the living. [Korea, December 1950.]" This Is War!, p. 144.
[Corporal Leonard Hayworth examines the latest issue of Life featuring Duncan's photograph
of him weeping at the frustration of his Company's situation.] "At dawn, the next morning,
a North Korean machine gunner shot Marine machine gunner Corporal Leonard Hayworth between the eyes. [Korea, September/October 1950.]" Yankee Nomad, p. 7.