Beddgelert - (pron. Beth-gelert)A Poem by David Lewis Paget‘There
once was a Prince called Llywelyn, Dai bach, The Lord of this Snowdon Wales, Back in the mists of the mountain,
when times Saw wolves leave their
blood-stained trails.’ (I sat by the Church of St. Mary
out there, The vicar stared out on his fold, His rheumy old eyes held the myth
and the lies That the Welsh told the people of
old!) I listened, he spoke, and I
doubted him then, The story he told so bizarre, But when he had finished, I
bated my breath, Walked musingly back to my car. Llywelyn, the hunter, was given a
hound, A present from England’s King John, A mighty wolf hound that he
treasured and took On his hunting trips, loping
along. The Prince had an heir that was
merely a babe, Still swaddled in linens and
veils, The child was his joy, he’d been
blessed with a boy, He was one of the Princes of
Wales. Llywelyn went hunting abroad with
his pack, The hounds were all baying the
way, The buglers followed, their
blasts on the horn Drove the hogs that were leading
the fray! The hunt brought them venison,
gammon and fowl, The hunt brought them mutton and
game, But Gelert, the hound, was nowhere
to be found Though the Prince called, and
bellowed his name. Llywelyn rode back to the palace
at dusk, Dismounted and looked for his
son, The cot was all bloodstained, the
covers were torn And a sign of the child, there
was none! Then Gelert leapt up, and he
greeted the Prince With a loud joyous cry in the
dark, His fur was all bloodied, his
teeth dripped with gore, And Llywelyn shrank back at his
bark. In thinking his son had been
slaughtered, the Prince Cried out as he lifted his sword, And ran through the hound as he
fell to the ground And he cursed and he cried, the
good lord! But then came an answering,
pitiful cry From the child that lay under a
bed, The boy was uncut, but was
smeared with the blood Of the wolf that lay next to him,
dead! The throat had been torn from the
wolf by the hound, Brave Gelert defended the son, And now that the Prince held the
child in his arms He reflected on what he had done! He cradled the body of Gelert and
wept, And buried in honour his hound, He set up a stone with the tale
that it told And it stands there today, on its
ground. The place is Beddgelert, in Gwynedd,
look you, And hundreds of years have gone
by, But history tells us, Llewelyn
the Great, Was never again seen to smile! David Lewis Paget © 2012 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
Reviews
|
StatsAuthor
Related WritingPeople who liked this story also liked..
|