The Last DruidA Poem by David Lewis PagetShe’d lived alone since her husband left Just after the fall of Rome, Deep in the forest she’d kept herself In the tangle of trees called home. He’d left with one of the Legions, they Recalled to defend the State, Leaving Britain with Roman roads And her people, left to their fate.
Aeronwy came from a Druid clan From a mixture of kings and gods, She’d never age in the forest glade Where she lived with her hunting dogs. She lived on berries and lived on fruits And the kill that the dogs brought in, But knew she never must see herself Reflected in any spring.
‘For if you do,’ said a holy man ‘You will see that the years are fraught, Your spells and philtres won’t help you then, You’ll lose what the ancients taught. The years will tumble over your breast In a wave, and take your breath, As long as you live in this vale of trees You will be immune to death.’
She wept for the loss of her husband then For he never came back home, She didn’t know he’d been taken off With his Legion, back to Rome. They’d met when a hunting party came To slaughter her Druid clan, But she was spared, for her beauty there Would entrance most any man.
He’d stayed with her in the forest glade For a month of making love, She prayed that he’d never leave her, in A plea to the gods above, She little knew of the world out there Of the waning Roman’s might, And so she wallowed in bitter tears In her loneliness, each night.
Her time was not as the time for us, Her minute was like our day, The years would fly in her restless nights As she dreamed her life away. But she woke as fresh and as beautiful As she’d been the night before, While scores of agues and deadly plagues Swept on, in a world at war.
The forest began to shrink as men Fed wood to their kilns and fires, What once had been a forest became A wood, in the sight of spires, She heard the clang of hammers on steel At the factories rise and rise, And soon her trees were surrounded by New roads, and telephone wires.
Then men came into her forest glade While cutting a new canal, She hid in the corner, in the shade As her trees began to fall. One day she woke and the cut was there With a little hump-backed bridge, She mounted slowly, up to the top And balanced over the edge.
She gazed down into the water that Was still as a mirror’s sheen, And saw the face that began to race Through the thousand years she’d seen. Her hair flew wide, and before she died She muttered a weary moan, ‘I’d be content if it only meant That my husband came back home!’
David Lewis Paget © 2014 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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13 Reviews Added on June 12, 2014 Last Updated on June 12, 2014 Tags: clan, forest, reflection, canal Author
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