Alan Jackson:
Alan Jackson is Scottish. The Pentlands is a range of hills just south of Edinburgh. “Wifie” means “married female”.
“This Wifie”
This wifie wi a shoppin basket,
A goes up tae her an says
Hey wifie, see, there’s the wild Pentlands
Just behind ye.
She drapped it.
The Sentries
The sentries patrol the city walls
With orders
Shoot the barbarians
Watch the gates
Behind them on the cool air of the night
Music and light
‘some lucky bastards are having fun’
(breaking glass a shout)
to be there… to be one
but it would take eighty years
to buy themselves out
and in
to the barbarians
Robert Graves:
Welsh Incident
‘But that was nothing to what things came out
From the sea-caves of Criccieth yonder.’
‘What were they? Mermaids? Dragons? Ghosts?’
‘Nothing at all of any thing like that.’
‘What were they, then?’
‘All sorts of queer things,
‘Things never seen or heard or written about,
Very strange, Un-Welsh, utterly peculiar
Things. Oh, solid enough they seemed to touch,
Had anyone dared it. Marvellous creation,
All various shapes and sizes, and no sizes,
All new, each perfectly unlike his neighbour,
Though all of them came moving slowly out together.’
‘Describe just one of them.’
‘I am unable.’
‘What were their colours?’
‘Mostly nameless colours,
Colours you’d like to see; but one was puce
Or perhaps more like crimson, but not purplish.
Some had no colour.’
‘Tell me, had they legs?’
‘Not a leg or foot among them that I saw.’
‘But did these things come out in any order?
What o’clock was it? What was the day of the week?
Who else was present? What was the weather?’
‘I was coming to that. It was half-past three
On Easter Tuesday last. The sun was shining.
The Harlech Silver Band played Marchog Jesu
On thirty-seven shimmering instruments,
Collecting for Caernarvon’s (Fever) Hospital Fund.
The populations of Pwllheli, Criccieth,
Portmadoc, Borth, Tremadoc, Penrhynduedraeth,
Were all assembled. Criccieth’s mayor addressed them
First in good Welsh and then in fluent English,
Twisting his fingers in his chain of office,
Welcoming the things. They came out on the sand,
Not keeping time to the band, but moving seaward
Silently at a snail’s pace. But at last
The most odd, indescribable thing of all,
Which hardly one man there could see for wonder,
Did recognizably a something.’
‘Well, what?’
‘It made a noise.’
‘A frightening noise?’
‘No, no.’
‘A musical noise? A noise of scuffling?’
‘No, but a very loud, respectable noise –
Like groaning to oneself on Sunday morning
In Chapel, close before the second psalm.’
‘What did the mayor do?’
‘I was coming to that.’
\
The Broken Girth
Bravely from Fairyland he rode forth, on furlough,
Astride a tall bay given him by the Queen
From whose couch he had leaped not half-an-hour since,
Whose lilies-of-the-valley shone at his helm.
But alas, as he paused to assist five Ulstermen
Sweating to raise a recumbent Ogham pillar,
Breach of a saddle-girth tumbled Oisín
To common Irish earth. And at once, it is said,
Old age came on him with grief and frailty.
So Patrick asked: would he not confess the Christ? –
Which for that Lady’s sake he laothed to do,
But northward, bravely turned his eyes in death.
It was Fenians bore the corpse away
For burial, keening.
Curse me all squint-eyed monks
Who misconstrue the passing of Finn’s son:
Old age, not Fairyland was his delusion.
Okay, I’m not going to repeat the rest in full, but:
WH.Auden:
Roman Wall Blues
The Quest (long!)
…okay, that’s enough for now, maybe.