David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • AMONG THE TRUMPETS

    A committee of eight Hebrew scholars –

    politically balanced between high church

    and puritan – produced in Cambridge

    University four hundred years ago,

    what Tennyson called ‘the greatest poem’,

    the King James’ version of The Book of Job.

    They were not paid but promised possible

    preferment – essential for some comfort

    in the church and the groves of academe

    of a country racked by civil strife.

     

    Their contribution to the new monarch’s

    pursuit of national unity

    was ten books: from Chronicles – ‘These are the sons

    of Israel…’ – to The Song of Solomon –

    ‘Let him kiss me with the kisses

    of his mouth.’ The Book of Job was the sixth.

     

    Imagine a committee of divines,

    an octet of cloistered pedants producing

    not a camel but a steed that ‘saith

    among the trumpets, Ha, ha; and he

    smelleth the battle afar off, the

    thunder of the captains, and the shouting…’

     

     

     

    Note: the poem was first published on the site in November 2015.

     


    One response to “AMONG THE TRUMPETS”


    1. John+Huddart Avatar
      John+Huddart

      How I missed this in 2015, I don’t know! There is a brilliant radio play by David Pownall on the same theme, called ‘Dreams and Censorship’. To digress, with the BBC under threat yet again from the Tories who would steal it and flog it off, I wonder what would happen to that priceless radio archive? Some of it creeps onto BBC Sounds, but with no license fee, presumably this would start, like the smile on the Cheshire cat, to gradually disappear.
      Your poetry would be then one of the few places left to seek solace and erudition. As in this gem, here!

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