The Border Ballads
By Angusfolklore
- 28 reads
Hear, these women singing the pure thread of pain,
woven through the landscape where there was no grace
but dread and drama, a silver dreaming silvering the land
like a deadly river never kind to mankind.
Close eyes, imagine beyond their steel tongues,
sword hands and men deceitful by day
but made mirk brave by two-faced moonlight.
These men, these women there,
dwellers in debatable lands, an unmapped state
between nations, never wholly Scots or English,
mistrusted reivers, hated by kings.
For centuries the teller women sang,
remembering blood, more than loss.
Their songs like wire in no man's land
through the taut ligaments of this place.
She sings now of an armoured man
brought down and left for corbie's food,
neither hero nor fool in his end,
indifferent death by the thousand fold,
watched by blood loving Cheviot heights.
Before even this border was drawn,
this was the land the Brigantes hardly tamed,
which was barely won by the veneer
of Saxon tongues.
As she intones, the silver moon becomes
a war-worn helmet hammered flat
as a counterfeit coin,
or else a sickle ready for those
transgressors of five thousand raids.
Monks' chants beyond the Pennines,
curses chanted in the dales and fells,
the stark oath engines of countless years,
hard bitten generations grown only
high enough to face death unflinchingly.
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Comments
Women, I guess, are the
Women, I guess, are the bearers of light and chroniclers of darkness.
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