The Ice ScreamA Poem by David Lewis PagetThe last of the autumn sun had gone, The winter was blowing in, And on her broom, the witch of the north Arrived with her bag of sin, We’d laid new straw in the cattle byre Locked in the rooster and hen, But the fox had dug right under the wire And done for them both again. The pigs got out, and rooted around And trampled the pumpkins in, When Molly said, ‘I tell you again, It’s down to old Martha’s kin. She’ll be the death of the poor old duck, Her flounces and bill and coo, She’s got all the menfolk ruffled up And I’ve seen her looking at you!’ I looked away and I baled the hay At the mention of Lizzie Pride, She’d come to stay at her aunt’s the day Her mother and father died, But Martha couldn’t control her then She had the place in a whirl, With her long, long legs, and eyes that begged That said ‘I’m a wayward girl.’ She’d had Tom Horne in a field of corn, She’d had Dick Black in the hay, And in the barn of our rustic farm She’d bared her legs my way, Now Molly is just a homely wench And she rarely lights my spark, But Lizzie Pride took my breath aside And I had her, out in the park. The frost came in with a vengeance And it froze the edge of the tarn, She said, ‘It’s getting too cold out here, I’ll meet you back in the barn.’ I knew it was getting dangerous For Molly had seemed forlorn, She’d got to whisper with Mrs. Black And the girlfriend of Tom Horne. The rumours started away back then That a certain girl was cursed, The cows got undulant fever With our milking shed the worst, The evil follows the witch, they said, Then a pig and a heifer died, And Molly pointed the finger, then Went into the house and cried. I’d been up late with a bloated cow So for once I slept in late, And when I woke there was no-one there, I went to the garden gate, And over at the edge of the tarn They were there with the ducking chair, With Lizzie tied as she screamed and cried They ducked her down to her hair. I ran as fast as I could, I called, I ranted and screamed and raved, They’d ducked her down for the second time Through the hole in the ice they’d made, I waded in and I pulled her out And I said, ‘She’s never a witch!’ Then looked at Molly, her eyes cast down: ‘By God, you’re an evil b***h!’ I went alone to the funeral Of that young and carefree heart, Nobody else would come along Or admit they’d played a part, Then I packed a bag and said goodbye To Molly and all I knew, But think of those fateful words each day: ‘I’ve seen her looking at you!’ David Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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