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Unmanned, like a bull bereft of all; a flaccid decoration without use; at least if thee had what I have thou could be a woman; ****** hiding your treasure for marriage and hypocrisy. And leave me with empty decoration; rings without sense, dresses without purpose. Go about your business thou say I want nothing to do with thee now; yet not a month ago it was all Peggy this, Peggy that; such are the changes of the seasons. I do not want to give birth to an empty ache; wet nurse it; teach it its father's worth; I cannot tell the ache how we loved, how we met, how we joyed. I cannot sit round this mughouse days and months I must out into the world roll in the smell of Man again with a jug of ale in one hand and earning a stony crust from some wight with a jangling purse. And forget the bull that was castrated.
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Apr 29, 2016
Apr 29, 2016 at 1:23 PM UTC
The Quaker Bear
Unmanned, like a bull bereft of all; a flaccid decoration without use; at least if thee had what I have thou could be a woman; ****** hiding your treasure for marriage and hypocrisy. And leave me with empty decoration; rings without sense, dresses without purpose. Go about your business thou say I want nothing to do with thee now; yet not a month ago it was all Peggy this, Peggy that; such are the changes of the seasons. I do not want to give birth to an empty ache; wet nurse it; teach it its father's worth; I cannot tell the ache how we loved, how we met, how we joyed. I cannot sit round this mughouse days and months I must out into the world roll in the smell of Man again with a jug of ale in one hand and earning a stony crust from some wight with a jangling purse. And forget the bull that was castrated.
An historical poem from a sequence about a Quaker in Barnsley who has to decide between two women.
paul-steven-laurence
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Apr 29, 2016
Apr 29, 2016 at 1:23 PM UTC
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