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"borrowdale" poems
soft larch needles I sniff wish thin dangling larch twigs hold raindrops christ & pagan wrapped to tinsel autumn light has projected Borrowdale’s matter a work crafts growth I peer at a twig’s knuckles a needle’s green edge a tiny globe dissolving landscape Borrowdale is a mass of details full a vastness of minuscule high resolution beauty immense numbers of bits of leaf-frames pebbles daddylongleg claws for an instant I spread let a moment explode as I climb through woods by crags every detail of me follicle bone-cell grease shatters or slicks amongst Borrowdale’s infinite tiny details one of my gasps stretches wetly with the beck others entwine with white fibres of gills unravelling gravity the calcium atoms of my teeth jumble along drystone walls moss green-gleaming my meal of Herdwick meat passes through my gut whilst Borrowdale’s details digest my soul
0
Feb 8, 2012
Feb 8, 2012 at 8:20 AM UTC
Borrowdale Details
The sky was a smudge-coloured blue up there When the sailing ship came in, With full top gallants and spinnaker flared Full flight from a world of sin, The mermaid carved on her prow was proud As she breasted the salt-licked spray, Her hair a-stream, as the waves she ploughed And surged to Ascension Bay. I’d watched her approach from the Sailor’s Rest That lay way up on the cliff, ‘It isn’t a question of when,’ he’d said, ‘Nor even a question of if! The ghost of ‘The Falls of Borrowdale’ Comes in with a clear blue sky, It happens but once a year,’ he’d said ‘On the twenty-fifth of July!’ I’d laughed at him in the ‘Admiral’s Arms’ As he swallowed his seventh ale, While others listened with frightened eyes Each face was a shade of pale, ‘You’ll see it best from the Sailor’s Rest, That ruin, up on the cliff, But don’t get caught by the devil’s cohort Swarming up from the ship.’ They’d scaled the cliff to the Sailor’s Rest, I knew the story of old, Had slain the crew of the ‘Captain Teck’, Or so it was always told, They’d left the ‘Rest’ in a sea of flames For the sake of an ancient feud, While ‘The Falls of Borrowdale’ lay wrecked By the mutineers that crewed. They’d seized young Molly, the serving girl Who’d worked at the Sailor’s Rest, Had pulled her hair and had pinned her down, Exposed the girl at the breast, They took their pleasure and dragged her out To the edge of the cliff, and pale, Then flung her screaming down to the deck Of ‘The Falls of Borrowdale’. And so it was that I lay with the glass So firmly fixed to my eye, Up on the cliff by the Sailor’s Rest On the twenty-fifth of July, The ghostly ship flew into the shore Under a mass of sail, No sign of the crew, no lookout stood On watch at the forward rail. The ship ground up on the Daley Rocks Rose shrieking, up in the air, Her timbers creaking and groaning with The mermaid’s look of despair, The crew poured out of the lower decks And flung themselves overboard, These phantoms, straight from the devil’s lair To put good men to the sword. I ran some way from the Sailor’s Rest Lay under a bush, and hid, I didn’t know what to do for the best But watched, to see what they did, They swarmed all over the Sailor’s Rest Put everyone to the sword, Then dragged poor Molly out on the grass And I cried, ‘Please stop them, Lord!’ Then the phantoms stopped as they heard my cry And they turned, each black as sin, Molly let out a quivering sigh And they burst in flames, within, She stood alone at the edge of the cliff And she waved, no longer pale, While the mermaid smiled on the prow of the ship, ‘The Falls of Borrowdale.’ David Lewis Paget
0
Dec 22, 2013
Dec 22, 2013 at 12:09 AM UTC
The Falls of Borrowdale
The sky was a smudge-coloured blue up there When the sailing ship came in, With full top gallants and spinnaker flared Full flight from a world of sin, The mermaid carved on her prow was proud As she breasted the salt-licked spray, Her hair a-stream, as the waves she ploughed And surged to Ascension Bay. I’d watched her approach from the Sailor’s Rest That lay way up on the cliff, ‘It isn’t a question of when,’ he’d said, ‘Nor even a question of if! The ghost of ‘The Falls of Borrowdale’ Comes in with a clear blue sky, It happens but once a year,’ he’d said ‘On the twenty-fifth of July!’ I’d laughed at him in the ‘Admiral’s Arms’ As he swallowed his seventh ale, While others listened with frightened eyes Each face was a shade of pale, ‘You’ll see it best from the Sailor’s Rest, That ruin, up on the cliff, But don’t get caught by the devil’s cohort Swarming up from the ship.’ They’d scaled the cliff to the Sailor’s Rest, I knew the story of old, Had slain the crew of the ‘Captain Teck’, Or so it was always told, They’d left the ‘Rest’ in a sea of flames For the sake of an ancient feud, While ‘The Falls of Borrowdale’ lay wrecked By the mutineers that crewed. They’d seized young Molly, the serving girl Who’d worked at the Sailor’s Rest, Had pulled her hair and had pinned her down, Exposed the girl at the breast, They took their pleasure and dragged her out To the edge of the cliff, and pale, Then flung her screaming down to the deck Of ‘The Falls of Borrowdale’. And so it was that I lay with the glass So firmly fixed to my eye, Up on the cliff by the Sailor’s Rest On the twenty-fifth of July, The ghostly ship flew into the shore Under a mass of sail, No sign of the crew, no lookout stood On watch at the forward rail. The ship ground up on the Daley Rocks Rose shrieking, up in the air, Her timbers creaking and groaning with The mermaid’s look of despair, The crew poured out of the lower decks And flung themselves overboard, These phantoms, straight from the devil’s lair To put good men to the sword. I ran some way from the Sailor’s Rest Lay under a bush, and hid, I didn’t know what to do for the best But watched, to see what they did, They swarmed all over the Sailor’s Rest Put everyone to the sword, Then dragged poor Molly out on the grass And I cried, ‘Please stop them, Lord!’ Then the phantoms stopped as they heard my cry And they turned, each black as sin, Molly let out a quivering sigh And they burst in flames, within, She stood alone at the edge of the cliff And she waved, no longer pale, While the mermaid smiled on the prow of the ship, ‘The Falls of Borrowdale.’ David Lewis Paget
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