Thursday, November 30, 2006

Creekside

I spied an old woman this morning sweeping and slicing her way through a Tai Chi routine. I smiled when I noticed a little Jack Russell terrier perched in front of her, carefully following the smooth and controlled movements of her arms. It would have made my day if, as I passed, the dog had traced a sympathetic paw through the air and nodded in my direction. We would have connected. All three of us.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Verse 3 of John Kinsella's Full Fathom Five

There he is. Hook it quick.

Full fathom five
dredged deep
the glory
of drowning
in a river
or taking to sea
and being dragged
back to shore.
The hook as sharp
as sight honed
by shamans,
the corpse a prismatic
reflection
of the living body.

Chaotic fish
dissect currents,
dislocate reefs,
and scatter sandbanks.
They will not be recruited
as pallbearers.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Now on tap in Pictland

My first reading of this ballad by Robert Louis Stevenson impressed me not because of its weighty themes of racial annihilation, sacrifice and secrecy but because of the absurd and counterproductive impulsiveness of the king in roughhousing his two little Pict brewster captives. If he truly wanted the formula for heather ale then he ought to have been much more cunning. He ought to have invited the stumpy couple back to his castle for dancing and feasting and tankard-clanging licentiousness. (After all that time cowering under a rock, I reckon they would have jumped at the offer of a knees-up.) Then, later in the night, when father and son were sufficiently liquefied, the king could have acted to extract the formula - by saying something tricky like "so, men, let us conclude this wild and vomitous evening with a quiet heather ale! What say? But wait! Oh dread and deary me, I must be snuffing too much toad, for we have no such lip-licking brew in this kingdom nor any knowledge of the manner of its brewing. Only you -- prone and cataleptic imps -- possess such lovely-lovely goodness. And so I ask (at the threat of sending everyone straight to bed): INSTRUCTIOWWWNAYS PLEASE".

It's a great ballad though.

Heather Ale: a Galloway Legend

From the bonny bells of heather
They brewed a drink long-syne,
Was sweeter far than honey,
Was stronger far than wine.
They brewed it and they drank it,
And lay in a blessed swound
For days and days together
In their dwellings underground.

There rose a king in Scotland,
A fell man to his foes,
He smote the Picts in battle,
He hunted them like roes.
Over miles of the red mountain
He hunted as they fled,
And strewed the dwarfish bodies
Of the dying and the dead.

Summer came in the country,
Red was the heather bell;
But the manner of the brewing
Was none alive to tell.
In graves that were like children’s
On many a mountain head,
The Brewsters of the Heather
Lay numbered with the dead.

The king in the red moorland
Rode on a summer’s day;
And the bees hummed, and the curlews
Cried beside the way.
The king rode, and was angry;
Black was his brow and pale,
To rule in a land of heather
And lack the Heather Ale.

It fortuned that his vassals,
Riding free on the heath,
Came on a stone that was fallen
And vermin hid beneath.
Rudely plucked from their hiding,
Never a word they spoke:
A son and his aged father—
Last of the dwarfish folk.

The king sat high on his charger,
He looked on the little men;
And the dwarfish and swarthy couple
Looked at the king again.
Down by the shore he had them;
And there on the giddy brink—
“I will give you life, ye vermin,
For the secret of the drink.”

There stood the son and father
And they looked high and low;
The heather was red around them,
The sea rumbled below.
And up and spoke the father,
Shrill was his voice to hear:
“I have a word in private,
A word for the royal ear.

“Life is dear to the aged,
And honor a little thing;
I would gladly sell the secret,”
Quoth the Pict to the King.
His voice was small as a sparrow’s,
And shrill and wonderful clear:
“I would gladly sell my secret,
Only my son I fear.

“For life is a little matter,
And death is nought to the young;
And I dare not sell my honor
Under the eye of my son.
Take him, O king, and bind him,
And cast him far in the deep;
And it ’s I will tell the secret
That I have sworn to keep.”

They took the son and bound him,
Neck and heels in a thong,
And a lad took him and swung him,
And flung him far and strong,
And the sea swallowed his body,
Like that of a child of ten;—
And there on the cliff stood the father,
Last of the dwarfish men.

“True was the word I told you:
Only my son I feared;
For I doubt the sapling courage
That goes without the beard.
But now in vain is the torture,
Fire shall never avail:
Here dies in my bosom
The secret of Heather Ale.”

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Alabama Caboose ...


... but it could have been Texan.



A South politician preaches to the poor white man,
"You got more than the blacks, don't complain.
You're better than them, you been born with white skin," they explain.
And the Negro's name
Is used it is plain
For the politician's gain
As he rises to fame
And the poor white remains
On the caboose of the train
But it ain't him to blame
He's only a pawn in their game.


(From Bob Dylan's Only a Pawn in Their Game.)