Blucher’s Football

The Hunting Lodge is Marshal Blucher’s,
at 74 a hero of the hour at Waterloo.
Bonaparte flees to a channel port. Arrested,
gains the ultimate security of St Helena.
His conquerors (to give the allied armies
the credit they are due) return to riches,
or impoverishment. It’s a classy business, war.

Blucher is feted. Titles, land, even honours
from a grateful British crown, are heaped.
He retreats to Poland, then another fiefdom
in a disunited land, and this minor palace
where he can pursue an older enemy: the boar.
But not for long. Death quickly follows – a mausoleum
is built, provides a final place rest upon his laurels.

History may pause, only to resume its ironies.
Earlier Napoleon had marched into the jaws of hell,
and smelt Its Russian breath. His first retreat,
the overture to his end. Peace stutters for a century
or more, before the devil, poked, at last comes back
to intervene in yet another war. Red army
soldiers break into the Marshall’s tomb and steal
his European bones. Anticipating sport’s
clashes are the way of things to come,
they use his skull for football as an interlude
upon the march to skewer peace once more.

And here we are. Poland’s free, and sovereign;
prosperity spreads down motorways that split
the darkening forests either side. Great bridges
span the carriageways to give the boar safe passage
beyond the reach of commerce, if not the hunter’s gun.

Old Blucher’s house adjusts itself to life as an hotel.
Outside, two dozen jeeps and four-by-fours
stand waiting, engines clattering, smoke
exhausting in the fresh dawn air, as in 45
T34s vibrated on their bloody tracks.
We are not a regiment of tankers, young
and eager, trembling for a red star flag –
we are assorted farmers, vets, adventurers
and mostly middle-aged or old. The trucks we’re
taking to Ukraine, and one more war
with Russian Armies beating on a distant drum.

From a Poland Train

The stench of our train in the darkness.
An angry fire consumes poor coal,
the needles shake and shiver, steam
escapes from worn out valves. We are
delivering, but are no express. I wipe
a gauge: a tear of condensation offends
a tidy footplate. The fireman, who, thanks
to war and careless rostering, I do not
know, leans back, resites his cap.
A tender moment, shovel propped.
His throat is full. Expertly, he rolls
the blackened phlegm and spits
it to the night, then checks the firebox.
Momentarily transfixed, the burst
of light records a figure trapped in hell,
then vanishes with a clang of steel.
On time, I utter. The watch that was
My father’s put away. No matter what
the load, the line’s end, or how long
the wait while other transports clear
the ramp, we will be there as scheduled.
Jews! I hear my father’s voice again, the
pounded Sunday fist, the engineer’s skilled
hand bunched in hatred of a race that killed
his Lord. We have them now. Their stench
is what we trail across this land.
Justice. My father’s hand was hard
enough to beat his sinless sons as well.
We take on water, at some Polish halt
that only needs a decent German name
to make it whole again. I  listen to the
boxcars’ groans, the slow and mournful
songs, the pleas for what I cannot understand.
I thank God I am no sentimental woman,
for you too would weaken at the thought
Of what we do, that must be done.
We do not linger. This final night will take
them to the ramp beyond the arch. Then peace
for them, and rest for us. I’d get this ancient train to
give more speed, and help them on their way
if it was not too old, and only fit for scrap.
We are not cruel. It is for all the best.
This ends in morning, for a world they helped
to make, and which now demands a final sacrifice.