| Ballad of Jamie Allan |
[17 November, 2007] |
there is a hawthorn on a hill there is a hawthorn growing it set its roots against the wind the worrying wind that’s blowing its berries are red its blossom so white I thought that it was snowing
there is a hawthorn by a wall that looks down to the valley its berries are red its thorns are sharp it’s where we said we’d marry its berries are red its blossom is white and the hail makes sharp weather without her now I’ll make my bed in the bleeding heather
come with me oh come with me come with me my darling the berries are red the thorns are sharp and the corbies are craawing don’t send me out don’t cut me down don’t exile me my darling the thorns turn red kill the blossom dead and the tethered wind is snarling
there is a hawthorn by a wall that looks down to the valley its berries are red its thorns are sharp it’s where we said we’d marry its berries are red its blossom is white and the hail makes sharp weather without her now I’ll make my bed in the bleeding heather
Tom Pickard (b. 1946)
from Ballad of Jamie Allan (2007)
© Tom Pickard 2007 and posted here by the poet’s kind permission
Published by Flood Editions, Chicago
[Please note: it is an infringement of copyright to repost this poem unless you have the permission of the rights holders.]
Jamie Allan (1734–1810) was a gypsy piper who lived in the wild borderlands of England and Scotland. He played for dukes and countesses and hung out with thieves and vagrants. In 1803 he was sentenced to the gallows for horse-theft; reprieved, he rotted in Durham Jail until he died in 1810, an aged and physically broken man.
His story is the theme of Tom Pickard’s latest volume, a sequence as diverse as Jamie’s life; richly evocative of the Northumbrian hills, and the traditions of Northern folksong, by turns swaggering, sardonic, stark, heartbreakingly sad.
Tom Pickard is giving a reading at 5 o'clock this coming Monday at the University of Leicester (Ken Edwards Lecture Theatre 1; free admission). I’m looking forward to it.
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