The Baker’s Dozen  
 
The baker, in our village, a man who loved his craft,  
collaborated with the enemy in the war of 1940-45, as  
it was the only way he could get fine flour and other  
stuff to bake his delicious cakes and white bread.  
Our baker was a pleasant, brown eyed, a short rotund  
man who always had boiled sweet in his pocket for  
the children when he went for his afternoon walk. 
 
His wife was more of an administrative type, dressed  
in black, starched blouse and ankle long skirt, and in  
her blue eyes ice floes drifted; chased children, beggars  
and dogs with her broom, but had been seen feeding  
birds, bread crumbs on cold winter days.  
 
During daylight the enemy and Nazi officials came and  
bought the baker’s enticing products; in nights or early  
mornings those who could afford it, but didn’t like to be  
seen associating with a traitor, came and bought fresh  
bread, aromatic Danish pastry and chocolate éclairs.  
 
When the war ended, as wars must, the baker was sent  
to jail as a collaborator, but he didn’t sit there long 
I suspect - but cannot prove this- that his night visitors,  
mostly lawyers, doctors and business men spoke well of  
him into the right authorities. It is odd to think during  
all this upheaval few, if any, knew that it was his wife  
who wore an iron cross under her blouse.
jan oskar hansen
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/a-baker-s-dozen/