Wednesday 23 December 2015

Poem ~ Ploegsteert Violets: For Vera - Thursday, 23 December 1915 - Monday, 27 December 1915



Impression sketch of Lieutenant Roland Leighton. [online] see an original image at: <http://warpoets.org.uk/worldwar1/poets-and-poetry/roland-leighton/> Accessed: 22 December 2015].

i
'Vera Loves Roland' - such words
As those that might be cut by lovers
Onto a tree - always as a promise,
Done between two loves - to return
As time over years to stay forever,
Despite a slow covering of moss.

As when one unforgettable year
Unfolded, mulled over with worry
And hope, as did for many - among
Them a young lady of Buxton,
Vera Brittain; from a middle class
Fortune - a writer and feminist.

A year of snatched, shared time -
Of moments that unfolded from
Winter, to meet Roland Leighton;
Amid train stations that became
Terminals of joyful reunions -
Unbalanced by sad departures.

While time apart goes ever slower
Time together unfolds much faster-
With arrival of each letter to hold close
That Roland had written - as Vera
Opened an amethyst brooch of amity,
That transfers all light between lovers.

With gifts exchange in simplicity -
For a fountain pen that his hand
Might hold, that traces with each
Curve of his fingers, to make words
That he might write just for her;
A veil that drew over all anxieties.

Separations are never easy - then
Letters finally arrive to tell a soldier's
Life only five miles from a firing line -
In spring's blooms of flowing letters
Written honestly, to tell how a bullet
Past Roland's head while he shaved.

ii
With dull green enveloped letters,
Sworn by the writer in censors trust -
That no secrets held within except
For family and private matters -
Each one received like a light beam
Over sick seconds, to think him lost.

Within the maze of war arrives
Blaze of summer days, as officers
Escape - behind but close to lines -
Ploegsteert in June when Roland
Stood, to hear waking of every bird
Of the world, call in the early light.

His unconscious breath drying
Each line, as he tells how he has
A farm to himself where a family
Stay - indifferent to shells - the wife
Sending his servant with bowls
Of milk in which to bathe, perhaps.

At odds in reality of young men
Who bury young men - Roland
Stood amid the crowd of youth
In one simple, hurried burial
Of a lance corporal, who died from
Wounds, never to receive his DCM.

Slowly Vera unfolded each letter
Roland had once folded - to touch
The place he hurriedly touched -
She unsealed paper, his mouth
Had once sealed - his male fragility
Carefully unlocked by her solidity.

Each word Vera held, devoured
Every line - almost to feel that
She was there - beside him at
Night, in the quiet with Germans
Mending wires - There to tread
Alongside him over grassy lands.

Where grass concealed the dead;
Unburied bodies of their enemy.
Interrupted by those intervals
Of normality - to long for pictures,
Where he might sit, to see views
Of distant hills or close cornfields.
Vera always in nursing distractions;
Ever in the company of waiting.

iii
Minutes into hours, into months,
Marked out by endless letters
Back and forth on wary nerves -
When Vera learned of potential
Leave, as Roland told of facts
Of trench mud, rain and fleas.

Never again to feel clean or dry -
Then suddenly the news Vera
Heard how Roland was on his way
Home - inadequate words of joy
To arrive St Pancreas - wary, Vera
Detects a figure of familiarity.

Face to face, Vera and Roland
Shook hands to stand apart,
Stare, bemused and reserved.
Eventually another train carriage
Conveyed them amid company;
Eventually left alone to travel.

Dimly, swiftly travelling through
The dark, Vera almost afraid
To ask why he smiled - Roland
Confessed to an idea to make
Everything right - to be engaged
All mixed emotions filled Vera.

Not quite the romantic action
To accept, but then question
All motives, to know if that was
The right thing to do - if he still
Wanted her - just ‘alright,’ built
An odd tension through the air.

As with a journey of two souls
That knows but cant quite see,
Or understand - time together
Played its role as when her lover
Revealed a poem of Plug-street
Violets to reflect Roland's depths.

iV
Left alone together in darkness
Above cliffs, two would embrace
And kiss to send shudders of lips.
Rare love breaks its resistance,
As all too soon St Pancreas calls
Him away, amid intrusive crowds.

In suppressed despair as Roland
Stooped to pervade a passionate
Kiss, as Vera paused on carriage
Step that might carry her with him.
A whistle is blown - he cannot look
Back, pale and fixed - light dimmed.

Renewed letters, brief or long, filled
Days through September's haze -
To agonize over days with no news.
Grasping moments to hold onto -
That unreadable Roland face in day
Or night duty, hindered empty hours.

Deeper into days of December when
Smallest notes of Roland's declared
Leave; to see him home for Christmas
Burned in Vera a thrill of turmoil, wary
How leave might also be cancelled;
Joy curtailed by cautioned reality.

V
All can change in a day, without any
True reasons - when rumours state
A pending push on the western front
May cancel all leave - but halted by
A lover's note of promise to be home;
The hours tick along to Christmas eve.

Holding stillness in any one moment,
Roland no doubt held onto a vision
Of Vera, ready before a mirror - silent
In preparations of Christmas dinner.
To comb her hair; a beauty in a dress
As he fulfilled his last night of duty.

Above the trench, a single moon hung
Bright - as some officer given Leighton
Orders to repair the broken wire, before
The trench - Lieutenant Roland Leighton
Climbed, crawled forwards; the pale light
Of one moon's glow across no mans land.

A noise or movement caught by keen
Eye and one sniper's bullet sang out -
Pulled back to safety, the injured man
Told how his stomach had been hit -
And it was bad. Lieutenant Leighton
Was hurried to Louvencourt hospital.

In Vera's expectations of his landing
On English soil of Christmas day,
No word came - with likely problems
In delays and difficulties, young Vera
Paused to look across a grey sea,
With slow dreams to see his face.

A morning message, 27 December
Finally came in expectation to hear
His voice - but another's tone told
How a telegram had been received;
In regret that Lieutenant Leighton
Had suffered wounds 23 December,
From which he died - with sympathy.

27 December, a morning telephone
Call came - in expectation to hear his
Voice - but another's tone told Vera
How a telegram had been received;
In regret that Lieutenant Leighton
Had suffered wounds 23 December,
From which he died - with sympathy.

Suddenly light can dull every day,
And every day comes darkest grey.

by Jamie Mann.

Bishop, A., 1981. Chronicle of Youth - Vera Brittain's War Diary 1913-1917. Victor Gollancz Limited.  1914


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