So much potting on today that a whole team of us were working on many baby plants including cucumbers, okra and cosmos. The tomato plants sown only a few weeks ago were being planted out into a poly tunnel.
Our lunch today was the most delicious paella made by one of the volunteers – such a delicious and warming meal after a hard working morning.
I saw the following poem on Facebook and loved it so I wrote to the poet, Caroline Mellor, and she very kindly sent it to me to post here. It is printed in her book, “The Honey in the Bones.’ This poem links so well with the song I posted a couple of days ago which can be found here.
We Need to Teach the Children the Old Words
“Words are world-makers”– Robert MacFarlaneWe need to teach the children the old words,words like brabble and grubble,twitter-light and clinkerbell;words which dance and trip and slipand drip like honey off the tongueTeach them that a hazy halo of cloudaround the moon is called a moonbrochand that swiftly moving clouds are named cairies;how a vixen’s wedding is a sunny shower of rain,and that a single sunbeam breaking through thick cloudis known as a messengerTeach them to know the seasons and scentsof queen of the meadow and bride of the sun,how to tell Jupiter’s staff from fairy fingersand which roses bloom with the strawberry moonTeach them to spot pricklebacks in the tottlegrass,how to recognise a smeuse or a bishop-barnaby,when to watch the sky for flittermice and yaffles,and to pay attention to the dumbledore and mousearnickleas she graces the lazy leahs of summerTeach them a few of the old Sussex words for mud,like gubber and slub and stodge and pug,so they know that the precious soil beneath their toesis anything but worthless dirtTeach them to be users and keepers and makersof the words which bring the land alive:a storybook, where everything has its rightful place,including us;where the wilds are fearful and filled with magicand people do noble things, and nothing is impossible
In this world of harsh new words –words like planetary dysmorphia and solastalgia,extinction debt and grief mitigation,megadrought and megafire,anthropogenic, pyrocene,words which alarm and get stuck in our throatsdescribing a world which our hearts cannot grasp –we need to teach the children the old words,so that if they should feel lost,the old words might colour for thema warm and breathing, living map,a light to guide them safely home.
Glossary – also given to me by the poet, Caroline Mellor, for which I am very grateful. Regular readers will know how I love words, old and new, and I just love all these and the poem.
brabble — to argue loudly about matters of no importance
grubble — to grope around in the dark for something that you can’t see
clinkerbell — icicle
twitter-light — twilight
queen of the meadow — meadowsweet
bride of the sun — calendula
Jupiter’s staff — mullein
fairy fingers — foxglove
prickleback — hedgehog
tottle grass — high grass
smeuse —the gap in the base of a hedge made by the regular passage of a small animal
bishop-barnaby — ladybird
yaffle — green woodpecker
flittermouse — bat
dumbledore — bumblebee
mousearnickle — dragonfly
leah — meadow, clearing
gubber — black mud of rotting organic matter
pug — a kind of loam, particularly the sticky yellow Wealden clay
stodge — thick puddingy mud
slub — thick mud
nrhatch
April 3, 2024 at 3:44 pm
Once again, as when I have posted other poems, WordPress has decided to take out all the verse breaks. Why do they do this?
A possible solution:
Once you cut and paste a poem into WP, go into the body of the poem and put a paragraph break between each verse. Then resave it. Adjust accordingly.
mybeautfulthings
April 3, 2024 at 7:37 pm
I think I’ve been doing that but will try again. Thank you. 🙂
mybeautfulthings
April 3, 2024 at 7:41 pm
This is how it looks in draft. We Need to Teach the Children the Old Words
“Words are world-makers”
– Robert MacFarlane
We need to teach the children the old words,
words like brabble and grubble,
twitter-light and clinkerbell;
words which dance and trip and slip
and drip like honey off the tongue
Teach them that a hazy halo of cloud
around the moon is called a moonbroch
and that swiftly moving clouds are named cairies;
how a vixen’s wedding is a sunny shower of rain,
and that a single sunbeam breaking through thick cloud
is known as a messenger
but when it’s in the post, all the breaks disappear. Maybe I should speak to a Happiness Engineer! 🙂
nrhatch
April 3, 2024 at 3:30 pm
What a great poem! I read it aloud with great pleasure.
Paella = just the thing for that rainy day, eh?
mybeautfulthings
April 3, 2024 at 7:39 pm
Yes, on a very wet day, the paella brought sunshine into the poly tunnel and smiles onto every face! 🙂