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


  • MERCY

    The now westering sun illuminates
    the serried galleries of discarded slate.
    There were once three thousand quarrymen
    and ‘The Great Strike of Penrhyn’ – a three year
    dispute. The owner, Baron Penrhyn,
    built terraced houses with front gardens
    for the few who had crossed the picket lines.
    The first chapel was named ‘Bethesda’ (Hebrew
    for ‘house of mercy’) – after the Roman bath,
    near Jerusalem’s Sheep Gate, where ‘the man
    was made whole and took his bed and walked.’
    They named the slate town after the chapel.

    As we drive on up the valley to the pass,
    we can see, increasingly far below,
    the river’s white waters and, suddenly,
    three black horses skittish in the meadow
    at the valley bottom, miniscule
    like the woman in blue who walks towards them.

    We pass a ruined cottage. ‘And thorns
    shall come up in her palaces, nettles
    and brambles in the fortresses thereof:
    and it shall be an habitation
    of dragons, and a court for owls.’ The height
    of the mountains, the darkness of the lake
    at the top of the pass, the size of boulders
    the last ice age left are biblical.
    Among distant ruins, we imagine,
    too readily, both dragons and owls.
    But we speak of the three black horses
    and the woman in blue as a blessing.

     

     

     


    2 responses to “MERCY”


    1. Steve Crewe Avatar
      Steve Crewe

      Thanks, David, as always for stirring old memories, as I do have some claims to a relationship with North Wales with my mother having been born in Pentre Broughton.

      Although not a Welsh speaker myself, I spent many pleasant days exploring those wonderful off the beaten track places that gives North Wales its charm

    2. John Huddart Avatar
      John Huddart

      Welsh magic – slate, water, wizardry, the gospels, and three horses. The Almighty smiled on your journey that day – whoever that may be!

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