The Pocket Watch
In truth there was much low cloud,
A strong breeze,
But a criminal blackness
As midnight lapsed.
In all honesty, I was not proud;
I tensed knees,
But my sense of righteousness
Had already collapsed…
Ushered from a dugout onto mud,
My task was to repair our wire;
I crawled, listening for the thud
Of shells on the shocking mire.
I slithered, pliers in hand,
To turn and twist torn ends;
Terrified, I tampered in a barbed land,
With entangled coils to mend.
Bothered by the detritus strewn,
The tatters of limbs were nauseating;
Young Englishmen, their lives cruelly hewn
And my vomit spilled, unrelenting.
I scrambled away in sickened retreat
But one hand an object grasped,
Ripped it from slime, pocketed it, a feat,
As I scrabbled away and then gasped…
In truth, it was a time-piece,
A war-issue British pocket-watch,
Displaying the moment of an infantryman’s death:
At ten-seventeen his life had lapsed…
In all honesty, I could feel no peace,
My breath I could barely catch;
For him there was no memorial, or wreath,
For humanity had all but collapsed…
Pete Ray
October 2016
I acquired the World War One pocket-watch and wondered who it had belonged to and how it had been found.
I wrote about it from the point of view of a German soldier, who might have come across it as he scurried back to his trench, following a night-foray to repair barbed wire…
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