A Christmas curse by Jan Needle
I get very jealous when I read all you
other writers’ blogs. You all seem so effortlessly serious in your choice of
subject and the erudition and application you so generously put in. And here am
I, pushing the monthly deadline to its outer limit (not for the first time, or
the second, or the third). Look at Dennis. Spends half his life zooming around
the planet enjoying himself, and still has time to produce a wonderful new
volume, and make me dribble with longing for his buckshee television. And then
a spiffing blog on top.
As you can see, deadline or not, I haven't
got a thought in my head as to what to write. My brain is wrecked. I'm
seven-eighths of the way through revising a big thriller, I've just spent a
week doing a final polish on the second of my nautical novellas about Charlie
(Craven) Raven, and in the interstices (try saying that to a voice recognition
programme!) I've hammered out an outline and pitching document for a novel
about Napoleon.
Fascinating chap, even more fascinating as
a personality than Horatio himself. Did you know, for instance, that his wife
Josephine was not called Josephine, and that he had two other mistresses he
called Josephine as well? Weird, or what? And did you know that the Duke of
Wellington hopped into bed with both of them? If they taught this sort of
history in schools, I suspect we'd be much more educated as a nation.
How I see myself. Handsome, debonair author |
What I'm trying to say, I suppose, is that
I'm tired. Writing fiction, however hard I try to kid myself, is dashed gruelling.
I'm jealous of you lot for your seriousness, and I'm jealous of people who
write songs. However brilliant they are, they are, like most poems, short. I
could do that, I'm bloody sure I could! Except for the times I’ve tried, of
course. You wouldn't compare my efforts to a summer's day.
So, I'll leave you with a curse. I know
it's almost Christmas, the season of goodwill and all that tosh, but life's too
short. I'll tell you an Irish story about a woman whose favourite farmyard
beastie was slain by an unknown passerby. People who know the history of that
island will tell you that it has a hidden meaning. So what? It's a wonderful
piece of sustained cursing, and I dedicate it to all of you. Bah. Humbug.
Nell Flaherty's Drake
Oh my name it is Nell, and truth for to
tell,
I come from Coote Hill, which I’ll never
deny.
I had a fine drake, and I'd die for his
sake,
That my grandmother left me and she going
to die.
The dear little fellow, his legs they were
yellow,
He could fly like a swallow and swim like a
hake.
Till some dirty savage, to grease his white
cabbage,
Most wantonly murdered my beautiful drake.
Now his neck it was green, and most fit to
be seen,
He was fit for a Queen of the highest
degree.
His body was white, and it would you
delight,
He was plump, fat, and heavy, and brisk as
a bee.
He was wholesome and sound, he would weigh
20 pound,
And the universe round I would roam for his
sake.
Bad luck to the robber, be he drunk or
sober,
That murdered Nell Flaherty's beautiful
drake.
May his spade never dig, made his sow never
pig,
May each hair in his wig be well thrashed
with a flail.
May his door have no latch, made his roof
have no thatch,
May his turkeys not hatch, may the rats eat
his meal.
May every old fairy from Cork to Dun Laoghaire
Dip him snug and airy in river or lake.
That the eel and the trout, they may dine
on the snout,
Of the monster that murdered Nell
Flaherty's drake.
May his pig never grunt, made his cat never
hunt,
May a ghost ever haunt him in dead of the
night.
May his hens never lay, may his horse never
neigh,
May his goat fly away like an old paper
kite.
That the flies and the fleas may the wretch
ever tease
May the piercing March breeze make him
shiver and shake.
May a lump of a stick raise the bumps fast
and thick
On the monster that murdered Nell
Flaherty's drake.
Now the only good news that I have to
enthuse,
Is that the old Paddy Hughes and young
Anthony Blake,
Also Johnny Dwyer, and Cornie Maguire,
They each have a grandson of my darling
drake.
For my treasure had dozens of nephews and
cousins,
And one I must get or my heart it will
break.
To set my mind easy or else I'll run crazy,
So ends the whole song of Nell Flaherty’s
drake.
I sang it at the Cross Keys last night.
With a pint or so of John Willie Lees’s bitter. Made me feel a whole lot
better!
Comments
Anyway, thanks for making a virtuoso blog out of nothing. Would that I could. I'm a robot again it seems, but this time the text is almost indecipherable.
Talking of which, Endeavour told me yesterday that the second of my Charlie Raven sea adventures went on to Kindle yesterday for the princely sum of £1.99. Once you've got your ATM perhaps you could buy a copy, and as a thank you, do a wee review? I'm going to ask Mr McCartney as well. It's called The Death Card http://amzn.to/1GGKvQ0