Friday, June 5, 2009

The Ghost

The Ghost

By Ross Dix-Peek

A white sliver of light

Diaphanous and so bright

Heralds the arrival

Of a being spectral

A sad keening wail

Does then the world assail,

"My name be Ann,"

"Not a child, but not yet woman"

Her awful story does then unfold

Of days long ago and things untold

Of her dear lover

And her vicious father

Of how one black night

She stole away by candlelight

'gainst her fathers iron will,

Her fear second to love's thrill

But, alas, unbeknownst to her

Lay there deep among the heather

An awful contraption so vile

Put there by her father, so evil

And the poor lass upon it did step

A lurking monster, a mantrap

A mean menace meant for her lover

But 'stead did ensnare dear daughter

Its steel claws her flesh did rip asunder

As o'erhead the heavens did thunder

For so very long did poor Ann struggle

Until from its great vicious mouth did she spill

And then among the sweet heather crawled

Til upon her bedroom floor dying she lay sprawled

A delicate crimson angel

For whom heaven's bells did mournful toll

Killed not by a base stranger

But by the wrath of a wicked father

And now does she, this unearthly spectre

Twixt two worlds forever waver

So much pain, borne of temporal anguish

And n'er to be extinguish'd

Her sorrowful lament to be heard for all time

As she for her dear beloved does forever pine!

(In tribute to Ann Dixie, who, in 1750, is said to have inadvertently stepped upon a mantrap set up by her father, Sir Wolston Dixie, which was meant for Ann's lover,the gardener's son, in order to deter him from seeing her, and it is believed that her Ghost now haunts "Bosworth Hall", her home! May her restless soul one day find eternal peace!)


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