About the poem ‘The Good Shepherd’ is from Carrying Fire, and is one of a number of poems written for my maternal grandfather. As a boy, he had been a shepherd in the Lake District around the end of the 19th century, and in later life would often refer to snippets of the Lake Poets, his beloved Robert Burns, folklore and his own life – often with rather indistinct boundaries in between! When, much later, I first read William Langland’s monumental 14th century poem, Piers Plowman, the central character came to my mind’s eye in the form of my grandfather as I remember him – gaunt, somewhat distant in aspect, but actually very warm and full of arcane knowledge. ‘The Good Shepherd’ uses the traditional counting system to punctuate a collage of memories and impressions which, whilst as oblique and elusive as he sometimes seemed to be himself, embody the fire which he carried to me. The Good Shepherd For George Lowden yan, tyan, tethera: out on the hills blown to the mills with the race of the rush of the Force of the fingers that would draw the child here is the wringing of the wrestling strength gripping the wool and the sweating flesh tearing the cloth seizing the silver watch that tells no time methera, pimp: from the fruit to the fire to the rough music squeezed from the sinews of the song of the hunt from Burns from the Lakes from the tell-tale light in the hospital night to the leaf-mould loam the dickie-birds' rest tapping the pipe stamping cramp hush hush sethera, lethera, hovera: fellside shift to meerschaum glow knowing the secret names red clouds of morning promise snow draw the child in charcoal ragged jacket roaming gaunt clipped grass and whitewashed lines in habit of hermit unholy of works rocking backward sunk in sleep dovera, dick: dreamed a dream a wonder it seemed a field of folk with tower and ditch all held between at the foot of the stair he is there again calling calling yan, tan, tethera: hush hush Oz Hardwick |