That Which Was Lost
Aug. 29th, 2006 05:37 pmWell, anyway- I was raking in the back yard just now and - chingle, chingle- there it was.
Thank you, thank you, lares et penates.
And here to celebrate is a poem I wrote back in the day about the Roman city of Isurium Brigantum (Aldborough)
ALDBOROUGH
They've got an image of Mercury
In the village church. Though it's weather-worn,
If the light falls right you can just make out
His horns and his staff. The Roman town
Was a bustling place. It had walls this thick
And a governor's palace. It's only been dug for
Randomly. A man lifting tubers
Hits on a pavement. A coin and a brooch
Are spotted among her alyssum
By a woman weeding. Two fine mosaics
Are shown in situ in two little houses
Built to their measure- which made me think
Of the three little pigs and the big, bad wolf;
He huffed and he puffed and he blew the house down-
Twice, not thrice. In the heritage shop
I bought this torc which I'm wearing now
For the ancestors. It cost me a quid
And the gilt wore off in a couple of days.
It feels like a watch- every once in a while
I'll glance down at it to check the time.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-30 01:21 pm (UTC)A coin and a brooch
Are spotted among her alyssum
By a woman weeding.
How beautifully you wound that line around, a little surprise!
I like your poetry very much.
And I do remember when you lost your first ring. How perfect, that it found its way back (I am thinking of Tolkein's Ring, Which "wants to be found") to you again!
no subject
Date: 2006-08-30 01:42 pm (UTC)I love alyssum; it smells of heaven.