O, Merlin dread, we place this stone above your head to safely bind your spells alone and call your fancies dead while we above, the farmers, tread and build our homes and earn our bread Yes, Merlin, I the village elf I cannot lie I lock you there as well myself and mumble prayers as I pass by against your magic, God knows why: to save our health, let Merlin die But words of prayer and words of spell are of a pair and every time I pass your cell I feel a stirring in the air perhaps your magic makes me dare to bid you well in secret prayer Sink as the tide sinks fall as the waves fall fade as the day fades die as the seed dies Wait as the minutes wait see as the blind see speak as the heart speaks love as the Loved loves Merlin suffering under stone Merlin when my voice is gone do not let your life go slack or magic change – from white to black Merlin childlike in your age shield that child and teach that sage so both released with magic may enchant the sun some free-er day (to a poet imprisoned for political reasons, 1960s) |
Poems by Janet
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von Gumppenberg | Earth's Creatures |
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