by Humphlock » Thu Feb 14, 2008 10:10 pm
Roll up, roll up for the first part of another of Wal's poems. There's an accompanying note which explains that the story dates from about 1820 and deals with "Ian Bahn's race to Inverary, the object of which was to file a claim to ownership of Tea Gardens in Ceylon." Here we go:
The Epic of Ian Bahn
By Walter Paterson
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Listen, my children, and you shall hear
A grandad's tale of the yester-year
My sight grows dim, yet the memory true
Recalls the tale I would tell to you.
No fictitious tale of a gallant grand
Who rescues a maid, from a villain's hand
Nor a tale of war in some distant place
But the tale of an actual Marathon race
Famed is that Greek, who raced upon
The dusty plain of Marathon
Yet Ian Bahn, like a greyhound sleek
Ran a greater race than the famous Greek.
The sun o'er Arran's peaks of grey
Has ushered in the Summer day
Her beams illume the grassy vale
Beneath the hills, of Carradale
There on a cot, the sunbeams fall
On roof of thatch, and whitewashed wall
The rough-hewn stones, in rugged form
Have weathered many a Winter storm
By Craftsmen wrought, whose building art
Defies the storm to tear apart.
Within that cot, our record tells
A poor, but honest, Crofter dwells
Inured to poverty and constant toil
He wrests a living from a stubborn soil
A toil-worn man, whose life's design
Scarce rises o'er starvation line
Within the cot, the rafters low
Are mirrored in the peat fire's glow
A Crusie, pendant from a ceiling beam
Scarce lightens darkness, in its feeble gleam.
The humble porridge crowns his breakfast board
No other diet does his means afford
This dawning day may change his fate
From crushing poverty to rich estate
He views the sun, his arms extend
And thus, to Heaven, his prayers ascend
Ye Powers above, whose heavenly plan
Controls the destiny of man
A poor man's prayer, in pity, hear
Nor turn aside the listening ear
Grant me that smile, the Gods bestow
On favoured mortals here below
For fortune's grace, I now compete
With fleetness bless my running feet
Bid penury and care begone
Shower wealth abundant from Ceylon
By this grim dagger, which I tore
From Robber Chief, in days of yore
I vow that ere that circling sun
Her great diurnal round has won
My nimble feet will again be seen
A-dancing here, on the village green.
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What a build-up eh? Tune in tomorra night for part 2.
That wiz a divilish good phota o Wal, chuckie. Man, he's lookin smert smert.