The Poetry Corner

Picpus

By Paul Cameron Brown

The day I went to LaFayette's grave, the concierge became our tour guide amid an old ruin of tombstones including bedraggled de Tocqueville's crypt (and he, heir apparant of America, too). There, too, the odd City of St. Louis tribute Fayettevilles after yet another "Saint" Louis, despoiler of the Jews - both sitting, squat and apparant, in summer dust, so shingle-flat, mindful of Place De La Nation, more blood-letting blocks away (so the aristocracy might be healed). A chapel nun then reached in loud silence for our Lord, her black habit / upraised hands forming a brilliant crucifix against sky and altar. Some francs exchanged hands (Monsieur le keeper, after all, obliged us by opening a private cemetery, aprs heures), the graves looked so wretched - death stylized in military formation, row on row, every private carrying a field marshall's baton only this time of mortality's making, crestfallen, no Agile Lapin/Moulin Rouge here, in the joyless, little garden (not a bird sang), our old Frenchman narrating/marching on in The Old Guard, Grand Arme fashion a little Napoleonic his cemetery, his brandy like his suspender buttons lost to recent antiquity. Place des Vosges, Place des Vendomes. A dish of plaice at the palais and a royal hippodrome.