David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • BLIGHTY WARD

    After the halting journey from Calais,

    via Waterloo and the main line north,

    to be carried that autumn afternoon

    in the estate’s wagons through the park gates,

    past the grazing deer, to be greeted

    on the front steps by his Lordship himself

    with a small speech about sanctuary,

    the first of the curable invalids –

    trench foot, shell shock, TB – must have thought

    they were in some temporary heaven.

     

    They called it ‘Blighty Ward’ – the Garden Salon

    with windows that overlooked the parterre

    where the last of the roses were blooming.

    Brisket, pork and occasional venison

    and chrome ash trays to stub out your fags

    and the always pretty nurses smelling

    like girls, even his lordship’s own daughters,

    they knew were too cushy by half for them.

    Fattened, in spring they returned for the big push.

    Those who survived would never tell, had no

    permission to speak, were silent to the grave.

     

    Someone still puts a small wooden cross

    among the ferns in the Orangery

    for the Gardener’s boy lost at Paschendaele.

    No one ever spoke of the Cook’s conchie son –

    of his courage refusing to bow

    to the bidding of the officer class,

    refusing to take the tainted shilling.

    The red poppies grew in the ravaged soil.

    They did not grow because of the dead.

    They have been purloined – men and flowers.

     

     

     


    One response to “BLIGHTY WARD”


    1. Mary Clark Avatar
      Mary Clark

      Excellent.

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