Thursday, October 10, 2019

At the Abbey of Bury St. Edmund's

by Brett Rutherford



Had they not
refused their fathers’ blessings
before they set out,
masters of the league of thieves —

Had they not
found unguarded, thanks
the sextons’ drunkenness,
the Burial Church of St. Edmund —

Had they not
in eagerness for profit
pried the iron nails
from the wooden door —

Had they not
in gold-lust, that Midas curse,
tried to pry loose
the gilding
above the lintel —

Had they not
left so visible a ladder
in alleyway
as two of them clambered
up to search for gaps
in the terracotta —

Had they not
made noise enough
to wake the dead
with shovel, pick, and hammer
in every-which-way attack
on the portal —

Had they not
greedily indulged in
“Mushrooms, fresh today!”
at the nearby inn that night

then off they would have gone
with the bones of St. Edmund,
some to re-sell
to ardent collectors,
some to grind up
for miracle cures,
but no!  All eight
fell down in one flow
of writhing limbs, hands
clasping their tools
and implements;
down, too,
the clattering ladder.

Eyes glazed, arms frozen
in acts of desecration,
they lay inert,
till well past dawn.

The watchman found them,
paralyzed yet breathing.
The bailiff was called.
A crowd assembled.
The burglars’ tools
were noted and catalogued.

A miracle! All cried
as thieves awoke
and were put in irons.
An eager friar
passing that way
on a pilgrimage,
reclaimed the precious
door-nails,
stuffed the torn gilding
into his mendicant bag,
and shuffled away.

The crowd moved
to the gallows’ square
where Bishop Theodred
condemned all eight
to share a single gibbet.

A miracle! The crowd chants
as word of the failed robbery
spreads far and wide.
Saint Edmund saved himself!


Ah! moaned the eldest thief,
had we not
partaken of
that mushroom stew!


1 comment:

  1. I liked the concept of churchyard poems. This one was satisfyingly ribald and irreverent; you captured the underbelly of medieval era hustling and opportunism quite satisfyingly. I liked the repeating chant structure of the beginning, rather song-like, and enjoyed how the description of the men falling down the ladder and grabbing tools made it seem like Saint Edmund himself had done something to them to make them fall.

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