17 January 2012

Tuesday Poem: 'To the Gods the Shades' by Kathleen Jones

 
Inscription on a 1st century Roman tombstone in Hexham.

The wolf and wild boar wintered here
where Flavinus' impetuous latin blood
felt the unkindness of snow

and the granite hardness of the Wall
whose builders he defended against
the brutal insurgence of Pict and Celt.

Days of cracked leather, blistered hands,
the horses' breath rising like bath-house steam,
a northern mist obscuring the sun's retina;

remembering the soft, olive-perfumed
flesh of southern lovers in the rough,
hessian coupling of Celtic women —

the wire-boned, woad-stained, spoils of war,
who worshipped alien Gods and stank
of semen and ambiguous politics.

Flavinus, Standard-Bearer to the Troop —
speared by the carved barbarian
trampled under his horse — killed

by the cold driven in on the east wind
scouring the Tyne gap through this bleak
border town where everything closes at five —

his final dread — to leave his bones
to winter north in the sour peat, covered
by the same grey stone he died for.

Credit note: "'To the Gods the Shades'" was first published in the Lancaster Lit Fest Anthology and is collected in Kathleen Jones' 2011 poetry collection Not Saying Goodbye at Gate 21, published by Templar Poetry. It is reproduced by permission of the author. Not Saying Goodbye at Gate 21 can be ordered from Templar Poetry.

Tim says: I will be reviewing Not Saying Goodbye at Gate 21 later this week. I'll say more then about why I like the collection so much, but let me say now that many of the poems I like best in this collection skilfully evoke both character and place, as this poem does so well. I thrilled to stories of the Roman conquest of Britain, like The Eagle of the Ninth, when I was young - these days, I have a rather different take on imperial adventures and the grandeur that was Rome, but this poem revives the shades of that harsh borderland and its harsh inhabitants.

Kathleen Jones
is one of the Tuesday Poets. You can check out all the Tuesday Poems on the Tuesday Poem blog - the hub poem in the middle of the page, and all the other poems in the sidebar on the right.

11 comments:

Sarah Jane Barnett said...

Thanks for posting this, Tim. Good stuff.

Elizabeth Welsh said...

I recently read this poem of Kathleen's in awe - I really admire poets that can tackle this sort of subject matter. Thanks, Tim!

Mike Crowl said...

Love the line about everything closing at five...in the middle of all the heavy duty words and phrases it comes with a jolt of humour.

Orchid said...

"the unkindness of snow" - these three words stay with me. Thanks for sharing.

Tim Jones said...

Thanks, Sarah Jane, Elizabeth, Mike and Orchid.

Mike, you have gazumped the review I'll be running on Thursday, where I single out the same line! Great minds...

Titus said...

Won't single any lines, but enjoyed the poem very much. Looking forward to the review.

Tim Jones said...

Thanks, Titus!

Isabel Doyle said...

A beautiful choice Tim. I've often walked near The Wall and wondered at the homesickness and chill of the infantryman.

Best wishes for writing in 2012

Isabel x

Tim Jones said...

Thanks, Isabel, and I hope that you too have a good 2012.

Penelope said...

I wonder what the 'spoils of war' made of the intruders who presumably rendered them so very less than fragrant? For me the unspoken is as important in this brilliantly strong poem as the 'point of view' of the Roman at its centre.

Rachel Fenton said...

I do love Anglo-Saxon words in poetry - meat that they are.

Also love, "where everything closes at five".

Lots of chewy history and texture in this poem - excellent.