Coda for the Piper, 1746
By Angusfolklore
- 279 reads
They hung him at York in November,
seven months after Culloden,
Jamie who had cheered his
regiment out of Angus
with his pipes.
No muffled coronach for him,
the musician of Strathmore,
though Lord Ogilvy’s son,
remembered him long after
in Bergen with his tears.
His body was a metronome on the gallows,
a slow march no Englishman could understand.
Even the blasted rooks knew better than them.
He who would never see the strath again.
When the British Army called up
the braves most cynically from the glens,
they never were taught of such men
who made music for them before.
I do not know where he remains,
James Reid, or what rest they doubtfully
gave the like of him.
I bequeath him slow beat, the blues,
muffled jazz from another continent,
hard punk and resentful rap,
lest we forget, Celt to Celt,
and others allied to us,
who still labour beneath the lies
and the rule of those like
them who damned him.
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Comments
Celt to Celt. Justice has a
Celt to Celt. Justice has a slow beat.
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