That August, in La France Profonde,
the frelons were out in force,
honey-gold cruisers of late summer air,
their poigniards sheathed. The heat
lapped at a sticky terrace table,
our observation post for village fictions —
Jean, his bench-saw snoring to the hornets,
a girl scraping her pans out to the hens,
that old man in his garden chair —
le petit vieux. We smiled, as if our smiles
could throw a tremulous lifeline
to one who seemed to have no need of saving,
a kindly ghost, a dream of summer silence,
the gentle answer to our drift of questions.
That last day, when Jean came for the keys —
Nos amitiés à votre père, monsieur —
he tapped his forehead, murmured ‘Verdun’,
carried our cases to our little Peugeot.
Yes, I remember growling hills,
flickers of white and violet light,
a cartwheel of bayonets trophied to the dark,
the way our farewell smiles, careful, elaborate,
glanced off that casemate of a skull
where Monsieur Clermont had been taken prisoner.
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