| We ascended the foaming stair
|
| To the mouth of the Hobthrush’s cave
|
| Decanted the hot wine from a nanny’s throat
|
| And placed loaves on the greasy stones
|
| Our baby’s lips are blue
|
| Our baby’s eyes grow dim
|
| Take it off! |
| Take it off! |
| Take it off — the whooping cough
|
| And we’d be your eternal debtors
|
| As the doorway drew near our eldest appeared
|
| With a bundle in her arms
|
| It was clutching her tresses and nuzzling her breast
|
| And the colour was returned
|
| I used to hold him in the palm of one hand
|
| Now he’s grown as tall as I am
|
| With the face of his mother veiled in downy gold
|
| On the broad shoulders of a man
|
| He is strong with the second sight
|
| In these parts held in some renown
|
| Using words not his own he veraciously foretold
|
| Of a drought when the stream was bulging
|
| When the pictures become too real
|
| He buries his nose in the bush of my beard
|
| And gently pinches my earlobe between thumb and forefinger
|
| Until the present is restored
|
| At the murmur of dawn there’s a knock at the door
|
| And a small man standing by
|
| He is wearing a dogshide and flies for a crown
|
| One good eye a sparkling well in his brow
|
| I’d already acquainted myself of that voice
|
| Before he’d even spoke:
|
| «I have come to collect what is rightfully owed
|
| Rouse the boy from slept
|
| Get him bathed and dressed
|
| It is time he kept your end of the bargain»
|
| The bargain |