The Boarder and the BookA Poem by David Lewis PagetA
guy called Stanley Weatheringham Turned
up at my college room, I’d
wanted a quiet boarder there To
help with the rent, and soon, I
couldn’t afford to be picky, he Was
the only one that applied, He
looked pretty meek and gentle, so I
asked him to come inside. He
said he was writing his Ph.D. That
he only needed a desk, I
said, ‘Come in, and take your pick, I
only come here to rest.’ A
tattered book was under his arm With
a cover, badly worn, And
cut in the leather an ancient glyph In
the shape of a cuneiform. I
admit I was more than curious, But
didn’t say anything then, All
that could wait for a later date, Once
he had settled in, I
went away and I left him there For
the long drawn afternoon, And
when I returned again that night He
was sitting there, in the gloom. I
switched the light and he flinched and turned His
face towards the wall, I
saw his pallor was pale and grey, He
didn’t look well at all, The
book lay open across the desk And
I saw the ancient runes, Written
by hand on the parchment there With
a cluster of purple moons. He
turned and he snapped the book tight shut Then
he seemed to brighten up, He
ran his fingers over his eyes, ‘I
think I’ve read enough!’ He
sighed, and locked the book in a drawer And
he took away the key, Went
for a walk and left me there With
my curiosity. Each
day I’d leave him there at the desk And
return when it was dark, He’d
make some lame excuse as he went To
walk out in the park, I
asked him what the book was about, He
said some Persian script, And
when I pushed him for more, he said One
word - ‘Sennacherib!’ He’d
never want to discuss it, he Just
liked to be left alone, But
every day he was stranger, like Some
foreigner, far from home, My
sleep began to be troubled, I Would
wake in the early hours, Thinking
I’d heard a trumpet blast In
one of the college towers. Stanley
slept on the other side Would
toss and turn in the night, And
sometimes suddenly sit up straight, Cry
out in a sudden fright, He’d
often call out a single word From
the depths of a vivid dream, ‘Rabshakeh,
oh Rabshakeh’, he would call, And
then he would scream! I
went to the college library To
look up Sennacherib, To
read of the mighty battles that This
ancient monarch did, And
then I read of his army that This
Rabshakeh had led, A
hundred and eighty thousand in The
morning, lay there dead! I
went back up to my room and found Some
dampness on the walls, A
sort of a yellow fungus that Was
spreading over all, While
Stanley sat, pored over the book, His
skin was blotched and fat, ‘I
think you’re getting the measles, Stan, He
said: ‘It’s worse than that!’ That
night as well as the trumpets I Could
hear the clash of steel, I
dreamt of an ancient army camp Where
the banners flew for real, And
men were moaning and calling out In
a tongue I’d never heard, Calling
to some lost pagan god And
‘Baal’ was the word. The
following morning Stanley lay In
a heap upon the floor, And
blood was trickling from his mouth, From
every weeping sore, The
book lay there, malevolent Its
pages yellow with sin, While
a faded angel hovered there, Looked
down on the dying men. The
book was put in a quarantine In
the library, upstairs, And
Stanley, he was cremated by The
Dean, to allay their fears, My
room was locked and barred to me So
I had to find a crib, I’ll
never take in a boarder now Who
mentions Sennacherib! David
Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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