Blue Jacket
(The Fairy Well at Logie, Stirlingshire)
Travelling the road to Sheriffmuir,
you might catch beside the well
a flash of - was it blue, who can
tell?
Feel a thirst you never knew you
had before.
And take a step into the dell
to fill your hands with water
clear,
cool and dancing, bring it near
to drink beside the - what’s that
smell?
And who’s the little fella here,
in tailored jacket blazing blue,
and golden buckles on his shoe,
and grinning in no ways sincere,
talking business as if he knew
you well in single days,
before the love and childer came
your ways
and on your brow the ridges drew.
And can you believe the things he says,
the water dribbling from your hand,
your tongue as dry as sand,
still caught within his craze?
“Oh, take yer drink, you thirsty man,”
his belly rolling,
then he’s strolling
calling, “Will you join the band?”
As fellas come with colours
bowling,
out from all the open hill,
with drums, and pipers blowing
shrill
and in no ways consoling,
water in your fingers still,
but gone almost,
and nearly lost,
you raise the last and drink your
fill -
what magic can this water boast!
A single drop’s enow
to fill your belly anyhow,
but wonder at the cost!
The fairy dance upon the brow,
the rolling rollicking, sharp and
glad,
and nearly mad,
departing in the glow,
the fella in his jacket clad,
and quiet as it was before,
you on the road to Sheriffmuir,
with a thirst you never knew you
had.
Drowned Spirit
Into the seal you go,
dead spirit.
Into the seal you go.
I cannot have you wandering,
in her shape or no.
So, into the seal you go.
Into the grey you go,
dead spirit.
Into the grey you go.
I cannot bear the seeing
of her footsteps in the snow.
So into the grey you go.
Into the sea-calf you go,
dead spirit,
Into the sea-calf you go.
To gaze at me again,
the sweetest eyes I know.
Into the sea-calf, go.
Into the seal, you must go,
drowned spirit.
Into the seal, you must go.
Where all of the dead of the sea
must fare. To the heart
of the seal you must go.
The Fairy Road
I would close the door,
but the elfin creatures
batter and call
at the boards and the
hinges,
such a furor.
Should I leave it ajar,
it is soon flung wide,
a clatter in the hall,
like a car going through,
and a coachman’s “Yaah!”.
When I came to this cot,
by the Dun,
an almighty brawl -
smashed pots on the floor -
every night’s what I got.
Till I pulled down the
bricks
that had blocked up the way
in the opposing wall -
fixing for relief
from the fairies’ tricks -
opening the highway,
clear once again,
for the Seelie
Processional,
gaily progressing
to the mounds of the Fae.
But the hours that they
keep -
with their tumultuous dance
at the Elf-Queen’s ball
or the leap to the Wylde
Hunt -
dragging me from sleep,
with the summons of the
door-chime,
to listen to their song
and record it all:
whatever time may be kept
by the Faery,
it has no reason, nor rhyme.
Recall I do
I do recall,
they crossed one day
The fair and
shining line
That marked
their father's land from mine.
And in their
hand, with courage brought,
The clunking
ink on scraps
That held my
prayerfulness of thought.
They set their
spear aside, their wings,
Turned that
page to trumpets,
Threw my song
across the pastures wide.
Such holy
voice, it touched the stream,
The jolly
rocks, the cloud
In
cattle-breath, the hornbeam growing loud
Within the
border-wood, and played
A while upon
their lip and mine,
A dance of
blackberry and rose-hip.
They turned at
last, my cloak dropped,
Carried to the
floor,
Touched me as
they parted, stopped
Then for the
briefest minute, still
With me to
this day - said
Something that
will love me all my life,
Then went
their way.
The Seamstress
She
wears a red hat now,
since
the cloak got fouled
and the
tracks in the yard
became
obscured.
As she
works by the door,
for the
light, on the floor's
all the
trimmings of the cloth,
cut and
dropped.
Her
fingers seem fevered,
skillful-swift
and feathered,
needle
flashes, quick, and
the
occasional drip.
Breeze
blowing in from the street
stirs
the fabric at her feet,
gathers
them apart, that,
and tiny
hands in the dark.
Retires
when the sun slumps,
throws
in the night, joins the lumps
pounding
in the bed,
gentle
hands, tiny, at her head.
Silent,
sneaky stitch-work then,
carves a
collar, turns a hem,
puts a
cincture in a waist,
a flare,
and a sense of haste.
Wakes,
fingers eased,
fabric
flowing in the breeze
from a
door ajar,
the
garment laid out for her.
Gathering
her cap of red,
steps to
the street, to the wood,
dressed
in something understood,
enchanted.
Math Jones is a London-born poet, now based in
Oxford. Much of his writing has grown out of folklore and mythology, writing for
Pagan ritual and for the unseen spirit. He has had two books published: Sabrina
Bridge (Black Pear Press, 2017), a general poetry collection, and The Knotsman
(Arachne Press, 2019), telling the life and times of a C17th cunning man. He also has a spoken-word album, eaglespit, being tales and praise-verse out of Old English
and Old Norse traditions. This can be streamed on Bandcamp.
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