“To Louis Bertrand, Missionary to France 1852,” Ensign, Mar. 1981, 43
To Louis Bertrand, Missionary to France 1852
1981 Poetry Contest 2nd Place Winner
Where your countryman, the Conqueror, stood
eight hundred years now, and where another
hundred years will give the siege back in blood,
at the Channel’s edge you and a brother
come down where water washes blood away
to baptize him to peace. The waves that lash
these rocky pastures turn to emerald-gray;
the lucent spirit warms the sea to glass.
This green canal has burned before; a war
will boil up waves of men again to storm
this font—so silent now—to beat the shore
of Normandy in mist whipped black with bombs—
But when the water clears, Christ’s first conquest
will then, as now, reflect the age of rest.