The Bride of the Wind and Rain

The Bride of the Wind and Rain

A Poem by David Lewis Paget

There was morning dew, and the sky was blue

When the stranger came to town,

Riding a painted wagon, pulled

By horses, black and brown,

He carried a wand of hickory,

Was clad in a purple cloak,

'The Master of Elementals'

Said the sign - 'of the Gypsy Folk.'

 

The people gathered to hear him speak

When he stopped in the village square,

'I hold the secrets of wind and rain,

Of summer clouds up there.

The gentle rain for your barley crop,

The breeze that flutters the leaves,

Or the menace of darkening thunderheads

As the lightning strikes at your eaves.'

 

The people laughed: 'He's a crazy loon,'

They said: 'We think you're a clown!'

They rocked his wagon and jeered at him

But the stranger stood his ground.

'You jeer at eternal mysteries,

And you fail to understand,

But I have the power to raze your crops

With a twitch of my willow wand.'

 

They turned his wagon upside-down

And laughed, and danced and sang,

'There's not been much to cheer us here

Since we ducked old Widow Strang.

Her spells could never save her

And your wand can do its worst,

So show us your 'Elementals'...'

Then he said - 'Your town is cursed!'

 

He raised the willow wand on high

And muttered seven words

That didn't make much sense to them,

(In a tongue they'd never heard).

The rain fell out of a cloudless sky

Like a fine and gentle mist,

A gentle, soaking, water spray,

Then he said - 'Shall I persist?'

 

There'd been a drought, the people laughed,

And danced about in glee,

'We need the rain, you're a sad buffoon

With your vain idolatry.

So do your worst with your willow wand

Our crops will prosper now...'

'Your crops will nourish the barren ground,'

He said, 'I'll show you how!'

 

A wind arose in the barley fields,

The rain came pouring down,

The corn, it swayed in the gusts, the trees

Were bent toward the ground,

The sky was blackened with thunderheads,

The rain, it turned to hail,

The crowd began to scatter, and fled

As the women began to wail.

 

The thunderheads were dark and dense,

They turned the light to gloom,

The hailstones rattled on every roof

In the dark of the afternoon,

Then lightning flashed, lit up the sky

As the stranger paced the town,

His scowl so unforgiving and grim as

The lightning struck the ground.

 

A wedding party had sheltered in

The chancel of the church,

They dared not hold the service since

The thunder cloud had burst.

The noise drowned out the vicar's voice,

The organ pipes had wailed,

Playing the devil's music to

The rattling of the hail.

 

The stranger strode on up the aisle,

The people stared him down,

He waved his wand, the floor had split

As an earthquake shook the ground,

'How much to stop this craziness?'

A man stood up and said,

'You've made your point, take what you want!'

The stranger shook his head.

 

'Not all of your gold will buy me off,

You jeered and laughed at me,

Your town will sink in the primal mud

And be lost in antiquity,

But there is one thing I'd take right now

To save my wounded pride,

I would take just one of your number here...'

Then he pointed to the bride.

 

The bride had cowered behind the groom

As lightning hit the spire,

The roofing lead came crashing down

On the altar, and the choir,

A floodtide surged in the open door

And the wedding party cried:

'For God's sake, give him the woman then,

Give him the blushing bride!'

 

The groom was pushed aside and held,

The bride passed hand to hand,

'It's better we let you take her

If it will save our troubled land!'

'I'll only be taking her maidenhead,

Then you can have her back,

And live with the scorn and shame of her

Dishonoured, like you, in fact!'

 

He took the bride through the chancel door

And they disappeared in the rain,

Somebody said they heard her scream

And the bridegroom reeled in pain,

He swore revenge on the lot of them,

Ran cursing out of the church,

To look for his bride, defiled, he said,

He began his demented search.

 

There was morning dew, and the sky was blue

When she marched back into town,

Her dress was ragged and torn by then,

Blood-stained, and she wore a frown.

She carried a long white willow wand

As she marched to the village square,

And screamed; 'You'd better come out and pray!'

There was no forgiveness there!

 

The townsfolk hid in their flooded homes

As she wandered every lane,

There was never a sight of the stranger there

In the torrents of hail and rain,

She waved for the thunderheads to come

And she brought the lightning down,

But the groom was locked in a crazy room

In a distant part of town.

 

Now the ruined bride still walks the streets

In a torn and faded dress,

More like the rags of the hand-me-downs

Than a hint of future bliss,

The crops have drowned in the sodden fields

And the houses filled with mud,

As she screams like an elemental witch

For the loss of her virgin blood.

 

David Lewis Paget

© 2012 David Lewis Paget


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Featured Review

You're brilliant....you're freaking brilliant. I read it four times....not because I was trying to absorb the content.....Because I lived it.....You have the uncanny ability to make your reader a member of the cast!! You are a Poet slash writer slash novelist slash Playwright slash Dramatist.......Barbara....( forgive my grammar, punctuation etc......It's the wind and rain!)

Posted 9 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

I had to think about this work before writing my opion. The work has great flow and holds the correct speed at all times. The story is not new in a sence of things to come. In the first two books of the Old Testament the story is refined to show your virgin as the coming of a savour that culmanates in a wrong being done to an one for the sake of the rest. What makes this pome work for me is the way you manage to tie the parts together making a whole. I will be watching for more of your work. Great work.

Posted 14 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

David, I had hoped for a more cheerful ending with the bride being happy with the wand man...but alas was not meant to be..You tricked me again Mate..Hope all is well with Lyn and you...love and God bless..Kathie

Posted 14 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Such a sad and tormented tale. While it lacked the normal historical flair that I am used to and love, it was nonetheless well told and honed and crafted. As always, you are a master at narrative poetry.

Linda Marie

Posted 14 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Wow..... a new one! Excellent as usual!

Posted 14 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

this is a great story...very well written!!

Posted 14 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Fabulous! This is a treasure as always!

Posted 14 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.


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704 Views
16 Reviews
Rating
Shelved in 2 Libraries
Added on April 18, 2010
Last Updated on June 28, 2012
Tags: stranger, elementals, wand, church

Author

David Lewis Paget
David Lewis Paget

Moonta, South Australia, Australia



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