NIGHTWALKER

Flanders, 1917

“… the man who walked in his sleep to Fritzy,
slept well, woke, realised, and bolted…”     Ivor Gurney

It was not dusk, not yet, when he
stood — night’s last dim silhouette full
teetering he stood, out of nod with step as shut-
eyed he dreamed himself over the top, head

unhelmeted, mud-tousled, nod-heavy as
some old carthorse long overdue for the yard,
hands meek by pockets, top button askew as he
lurched serene and sleep-stupid through

wire’s one blasted gate where first-startled
bullets hissed their stave on his air of death yet
refused to thread his upright rest until

Jerry for himself saw how the wretch so
utterly slept to war, and with his heart-enemy’s
heart full-squared in his sight let his firing-pin drowse,
left the trigger slack — let this one man

walk who would take too easy death’s touch, too
easy — as a child might draw sigh mid-slumber at a mother’s
kiss then turn, in that small unthinking span
of self, small shoulders to the dark.

forthcoming in 'The Bone Ship', © Mario Petrucci 2025, used by permission of the author

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