Umbrellas and uniforms
- Oct 18, 2015
- 1 min read
Water splashes into my socks. My feet soggy, Like some schoolhouse mop, Stand impatiently waiting Under a mint green awning next to a baker, Some older businessmen And five young wives Deprived of love.
Stolen, maybe, their affection Because the state commanded a redirection of course; To war in Europe their husbands are to go.
These men as young as eighteen Think they know what they will find, That come springtime, When the bones of French poppies receive their seasonal milk, A truce will rise and set the skies blue.
We all dream of peacetime. And in this moment, As I observe them soldiers march on by With Browning rifles stowed in their side holsters, Wrestling loyalty in silence, I find my toes in wrinkled chill.
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