Read The Cutlers Of The Howling Hills Page 8


  Has suffered many a lightning crackle

  Many a wind-lashed day and night,

  And dry, scorched summer with the sun full bright

  There is but one name to reach its tip

  That storm-proved name must be 'Hardship.'"

  Each sage cast eyes one to another,

  And glassy-eyed they saw no further,

  Then turned back to the wise-woman

  But though her breath hung still, her form was gone.

  Canto Third

  On his throne of well-smoked oak,

  Soliloquised the minstrel soak,

  He raised his eye from the gnarlèd table,

  "My God!" he slurred, "it's turned into a fable!"

  "No fables in here mate," said the barman.

  "Sorry," said the wastrel bard,

  And fell asleep on his tankard.

  Yet though his eyes closed 'gainst the dregs

  On the table danced eight drunk legs;

  A spider reeled and jittered near

  And whispered a canto in the wastrel's ear.

  Canto Fourth

  In sage days cold the air hangs still;

  Sagacity, that heartfelt chill

  Is there amongst the fens;

  It stalks with hart and hare alike;

  It shakes with every lightning strike;

  Each fearful step from nature's psych;

  It measures by the foot.

  The skies hiss cold and hard with rain,

  The rattled moon keeps ghostly train;

  A half-shade foil to the paling sun,

  It marks its course, and Winter's run.

  Yet through all the cloudbanks' churning,

  There is no sign of season turning,

  No warming sunlight on the heath,

  No leaves for harts to test their teeth.

  In Winter's grasp the hills are fast,

  Cold, grey, still as the printer's cast;

  In capitals strong, this stark grammarye

  Spells sage and bitter one grim reverie:

  "Why does the sky the sun forgo?

  There's scarcely light to play the polo!"

  The sages keened unto the skies,

  And the heavens hailed upon their cries;

  For far away from cheerless weather,

  The distant sun shone on the heather;

  Far south in water, mire and moss,

  Out over many a slough and fosse

  There lit in dulcet springtime's glint

  A polo pitch of lustrous tint.

  As one the sages took to horse,

  And out they rode across the gorse;

  They ploughed the sleet-mired ground of snow

  Each hoof cleft coarse the ling below.

  All through the boiling clouds of night,

  Right to the half-froze daytime light

  The sages drove their horses forth

  Over the ice-wrought iron earth.

  They pounded over streams and fens,

  Beat hard the roofs of foxes' dens,

  O'er tumbled stones of country kirk,

  Through lych-gates half lost in the murk.

  Never was there so fleet a sprite,

  Nor wraith-like wisp of fire-damp light,

  No shooting spark upon dark heavens

  Nor flitting bat that turns and leavens;

  Ne'er did man reck one so swift

  As a polo-crazed sage atop the drift.

  Eight days their horses champed, foamed, sped,

  Their haunches steamed, their eyes ringed red,

  'Til on the ninth appeared o'er brow

  A troubled mire in morning's glow;

  No pitch was this, but black as tar

  No meadows green seen from afar.

  The pool cast back a spectral light,

  Mirror'd hills to seem lush and bright;

  Yet here was a hollow of ungodly vapour

  Where witchery trees turned sunlight to paper.

  Many a thriller was cast to the wind;

  A religious polemic announced "We Have Sinned."

  Yesterday's news was blown on the breeze

  A hundred best-sellers took flight from the trees.

  The sages stared out at this vegetable lexis,

  This ponderous, eloquent xylogenesis;

  They looked at the letters arrayed on the breeze

  And scratched their heads, for not one could read.

  Downhearted, the lode of their old polo field,

  Seemed a magnet to draw to their own homely weald;

  Yet just as they hurried their horses to leave,

  Out hopped a bull-toad with a ribbeting heave.

  As sunlight unravelled over the mire,

  The toad opened its mouth and recited a quire

  Of elegant verse so stately and true

  That the oil-black waters seemed to take on the hue

  Of amber and gold in exquisite brocade

  Woven with agate and with chrysoprase.

  Ream after ream of deciduous rhyme

  Blew past the toads where they sculled through the slime;

  They belched and they gulped out a thousand refrains

  Like the rumble of thunder that ushers the rains.

  Yet though the bardic toads did chunter

  And rhymes full tore the gloom asunder;

  Despite the wisdom hewn of lyric

  A curse came with this panegyric:

  With each new verse there rose an ague,

  Churning foul each sage's stomach,

  Making seem each lowly hummock

  A fleapit full of plague.

  A knight of highest polo fame-

  Galbanum was this noble's name-

  This lord of stealth and argent steel,

  As loyal to his master's seal

  As list-proved champions brave,

  Crept up unto the nearest toad

  Which not the slightest interest showed

  And sought its song to stave.

  Yet as Galbanum drew his knife,

  The toad at last perceived the strife;

  It quickly scanned a canny line,

  A cobbled block of foot and sign,

  And with a belching, metric flow

  Spake a shield to stop the blow:

  "It was before the lime-slaked fossils,

  When flagellates were the lone apostles

  Of a churchyard sea awash with life,

  Newly forged and not yet rife,

  But sparsely spread upon the deep

  In pseudopods that snake and creep;

  It was in times of ancient power

  That there were forms most grim and dour

  Who sought advantage in the gain

  Of causing protoplasmic pain;

  When first the movement of the tide

  Was a tolling bell to chide

  Those chronic marks on the sublime.

  So it was that the sea kept score

  And equity was first ashore.

  So let this simple chime rang true:

  Suffer the meek, lest the tide turn on you!"

  Canto Fifth

  Amongst the beams the shadows roosted;

  The minstrel was the wear'r for worsted;

  His coarse cut clothes a sop for beer,

  One eye cast far, the other near.

  The barman mopped around his feet,

  The wasted bard did low repeat:

  "Suffer the tide, lest you turn meek!"

  And with that he lost the will to speak.

  He slept there downed upon the table,

  And dreamed of lands of myth and fable,

  Until he woke in pale dawn's light,

  And scanned the room with double sight.

  "It's all too much! Alack! Alas!

  Was there not wisdom in that glass?

  Did not that spider talk in rhyme?

  Where went all the wasted time?"

  With bloodshot eyes his focus stopped

  Upon the distant countertop;
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  He saw a bottle yet half low

  And no barman to keep it so.

  In one swift move he was at feet,

  And twice as swift fell on his knees;

  He crawled across the mottled floor

  And at the bottle made to claw.

  Three swipes it took to gain his prize;

  Now on the floor the wastrel lies,

  The bottle dry as island sands:

  Once more he dreams of ancient lands.

  Canto Sixth

  Galbanum sheathed his dagger blade,

  For with a swamp the toad had made

  A new-cleft Hyperborea

  Hewn from wretchèd nausea.

  The next bold sage of steel and might,

  Aloud did laugh and mock the knight:

  "How sharp-tongued is your steel good squire?

  As sharp as the ribbet arose from the mire?

  There must be a fever aloft from this bog,

  For sure it is ill to be beat by a frog!"

  Galbanum bowed with mock aplomb,

  And when he rose he bit his thumb.

  "Sneer you may at amphibious verse,

  But ask I must, which pray is the worse:

  To hear and be humbled by so lowly a toad,

  Or to be over-hasty with your own goad?

  If you think ye immune from malarial lyric

  Forgive my disdain, for I am a cynic!"

  "A challenge!" cried his rival, Nystagmus by name,

  A sage of good living and plentiful frame;

  He drew out a broadsword and with haughty mien,

  Approached the toad on its island of green.

  To sky he held the glinting edge;

  Extolled the time a hearty pledge

  Of hatred to the slow, cold blood

  That through green veins did ebb and flood.

  Nystagmus was about to dart,

  When with a toadish, silent art

  The creature sat upon the slough

  Seemed to spy him well enough.

  It seemed that with each twitch and tic

  That heart, though green, was full and quick,

  For underneath the paper leaves

  This toad-destroying Damocles

  Was smitten with a verse:

  "When first the trees did start to spread

  Their roots through dust and ochre red;

  When forest's sultry canopy

  Made green the thunder-croaking sky:

  When there were shapes upon the boughs

  That fell and walked and took up ploughs:

  When all this happ'd and man was cast

  Of ochre and the acorn mast;

  It was that he first learned to gib

  And call this fresh-walked Earth his crib

  To draw his words from tiers of rye,

  To cast a newly tearless eye

  On all that he surveyed:

  That surely he believed was made

  Some paradise amongst the sheaves

  Some newfound font to pen his leaves

  Of history sublime:

  Yet forth from this new measured time

  There marched a second measure grave

  With at its head the will to stave

  Those of others, to cleft and beat

  And leave the birds of prey to greet

  Them to the leaden clouds;

  As though they found in fields of rye

  And ochre some new crimson dye

  To stain their hempen shrouds.

  So when you seek this skull to stave

  Think whether you be knight, or knave;

  Though dulcet sounds the harmonium

  T'is the ribbet brings encomium."

  Aghast and rapt all of the same

  Moment, the sage was struck as lame;

  The blade fell useless from his hand

  And lodged deep in the oil-black sand;

  The hilt sent shadings long and low

  To cast a stark sun-crossed shadow.

  "What happ'd here?" enquired Galbanum,

  "Forsooth in that toad's arcanum

  Didst thou not shun all measly gleaning

  Of subtle stress and lofty meaning?"

  Mute and fast Nystagmus stood,

  As a carving on the rood;

  He made no sound, nor tried respond

  But cast eyes down into the pond

  As though fixed far away.

  Although his cheeks yet bore the blood

  And through his lungs still breath did flood

  His soul, it seemed to stray

  There was the while a lull unbroken,

  And not a whispered word was spoken,

  Until a weathered seneschal

  Broke the hush that held them thrall

  "It seems to me," he dared to quip,

  "That this is meet to be hardship:

  To swipe at thoughts discorporate

  And suffer good Nystagmus' fate.

  Yet perhaps there is a way less loth:

  To use not swords but instead the cloth.

  A mighty fastness we shall build,

  A monast'ry with good things filled;

  With learnèd texts of wisdom fine,

  From subtle Nature's mind.

  If there be corners of this world,

  If there be parchments left unfurled,

  Age-tanned maps and star-charts curled

  In velum we shall bind."

  Canto Seventh

  The tale must here a moment halt,

  Not for Inspiration's fault,

  But to let the wastrel collect

  His senseless form and resurrect

  Once more to cold daylight.

  For the wastrel, still full prone

  Has been from out the tavern thrown

  With all the barman's might.

  With the last dregs of spirit warm,

  Still moving his bedraggled form,

  The wastrel marches to the drum

  Of rain, and starts a song to hum;

  His lips move with untimely slurs

  And eulogise the final verse.

  So watch the slur of thoughts unbound

  And listen for the garbled sound;

  Velum may hold the pages fast

  But wastrels will long books outlast.

  Canto Eighth

  To say the sages sacked the marsh,

  For sure would stand a little harsh,

  But when they left the ghostly slough

  They had a bag of toads in tow.

  They hurdled furze in thorny pales,

  O'er crested hills and pummelled dales,

  With banded hooves of iron red

  That caught the daylight as it fled.

  A last sly dart of amber shone

  All gleaming where the troop had gone

  And chased them as they topped a hill,

  To fire the crest with clement skill;

  Whereon the final tones of dusk

  Set heaving an inclement busk

  Of banded croaks in synchrony

  That eulogised this harmony:

  "The sun had set and ris untold

  For many years before the skald

  Did learn to tilt his head to write

  While mulling in the steeped sunlight;

  To take his eye from off his quill

  And set the words that echo still

  In ancient lays of ogam stone

  That spoke of light, yet light outshone.

  It seems too wondrous far to tell

  That from a stone in ocean's swell

  A beach was made and on it stood

  A being with breath to call it good;

  Yet not alone could he now breathe

  But to others could his thoughts bequeath;

  He was to be the ocean's liege,

  For on that beach, stood the first sage."

  The sunlight died and moonlight fierce

  Cast silver as the hooves did pierce

  The hoary ground, set hard with frost<
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  And rivers where the ice was crossed.

  Swift they ran, the road ahead

  Was like a line cast in the lead;

  For they thought not to glance aside;

  To glance would be to break their stride.

  Had not the moonlight been so spare

  They may have chanced a fleeting glare

  Over heathland of a silvered-brown;

  For there decked in pastoral gown

  The shepherd girl stood stock.

  She watched as the sages rode on clear,

  Far from the unnamed hillside drear,

  Where rested her good flock.

  In laic mode she whispered low

  Words spoke to chase, though uttered slow:

  "I pray the hills remember well

  As nodding monkshood bells do knell

  That bitterness, the sagest taste

  Has stalked diffuse across this waste

  For time immemorial;

  That long before the songs of man

  The first primordial lines did scan

  The furrowed brows of each sage clan

  With fear corporeal;

  So look upon the monast'ry,

  Built tall from blocks of sandstone scree

  And windows glazed with the true tree,

  The cruciferous seal;

  Look upon the subtle craft

  When it stands real yet true to draft;

  And think how those sage gambollers

  Became a race of thoughtful scholars."

  With the last line the moon dipped low

  And sunrise shone across the snow;

  The shepherdess walked in the rays

  And gloried was the day, and sage.

 
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