Birthday Letters

Para empezar el año con el pié derecho, que mejor que con un poema de Ted Hughes.

Chaucer

‘Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote

The droghte of March, hath perced to the roote…’

At the top of your voice, where you swayed on the top

of a stile,

Your arms raised- somewhat for balance, somewhat

To hold the reins of the straining attention

Of your imagined audience- you declaimed Chaucer

To a field of cows. And the Spring sky had done it

With its flying laundry, and the new emerald

Of the thorns, the hawthorn, the blackthorn,

And one of those bumpers of champagne

You snatched unpredictably from pure spirit.

Your voice went over the fields towards Grantchester.

It must have sounded lost. But the cows

Watched, then approached: they appreciated Chaucer.

You went on and on. Here were reason

To recite Chaucer. Then came the Wfy of Bath

Your favourite character in all literature.

You were rapt. And the cows were enthralled.

They shoved and jostled shoulders, making a ring,

To gaze into your face, with occasional snorts

Of exclamation, renewed their astounded attention,

Ears angling to catch every inflection,

Keeping their awed six feet of reverence

Away from you. You just could not believe it.

And you could not stop. What would happen

If you were to stop? Would they attack you,

Scared by the shock of silence, or wanting more- ?

So you had to go on. You went on-

And twenty cows stayed with you hypnotized.

How did you stop? I can’t remember

You stopping. I imagine they reeled away-

Rolling eyes, as if drivien from their fodder.

I imagine I shooed them away. But

Your sostenuto rendering of Chaucer

Was already perpetual. What followed

Found my attention too full

And had to go back into oblivion.

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