The Snow Child
by michwo
Posted: Wednesday, September 7, 2016 Word Count: 597 Summary: A fabliau or medieval French verse tale which will probably be the last thing I post in this group for a while. It may not be everybody's cup of tea. |
The Snow Child
Once a merchant, conscientious
And not in the least licentious,
Making money found quite easy.
Travel did not make him queasy.
His fair wife could not him soften
And he was away quite often.
Two years of this it came about
His wife was rendered up the spout
By someone she could not resist.
A son came from their furtive tryst.
Back from his long expedition –
What? How’s this? A new addition? –
The merchant chose to play it cool.
“Think not I’ve made of you a fool,”
His wife said. “One day, missing you,
The balcony I went up to
And I was sad and close to tears
And full of vague, distressing fears.
And it was winter, heavy snow.
I looked up from the earth below
Towards the sky. Then it befell
Some snowflakes into my mouth fell.
That snow reminded me of you
And I conceived. I swear it’s true.”
The worthy fellow in reply
Had this to say: “Without a lie,
No longer do I find it odd,
This love of our Creator God
In giving us a son and heir.
We did not have one to be fair
And if it pleases Him he’ll be
A fine upstanding man, you’ll see.”
And to the child he promptly knelt…
He hid though what he really felt.
The child was well brought up and grew.
The man thought: I’ll get rid of you.
And once the child had reached fifteen,
The merchant, prone to bile and spleen,
Came in one day to see his wife:
“Fret not, my lady, I love life.
I must take ship abroad again
No later than tomorrow. Fain
Would I take Agravain, our son
To teach him how these things are done.
A grounding he’ll have to succeed
In business. While he’s young, there’s need.
Pack our cases. Wake us early.
Say for us a Hail Mary.”
The lady, who would rather keep
Her son at home, wants him to reap
The benefits of life abroad
And not be, like so many, bored.
To this voyage she gives permission,
To this latest expedition.
At dawn the man gets out of bed
No longer with a heart like lead.
His wife though feels a kind of grief,
A worry that’s without relief.
Perhaps her son will not return.
What will he from this journey learn?
Through Lombardy they make their way,
In a Genoan inn they stay
And Agravain, like Joseph now,
To an Egyptian down must bow
And into slavery must go
To a far land he does not know.
The merchant, having sold the lad,
Sees there are bargains to be had
And he must make the most of them.
Imagine his wife’s sorrow when
She sees that he’s come back alone.
You’d need to have a heart of stone
To watch her faint, not sympathize.
Her son. What’s happened? Has he died?
The merchant tries to calm her down:
“Well, life goes on, they say. Don’t frown.
It serves no useful purpose to.
Liguria, hot like a flue,
Was basking in the noonday heat
And both of us were hot, dead beat.
We’d walked up to a plateau high.
The sun was ardent, that’s no lie,
And burned us with its burning rays.
I watched your son through the heat haze,
As if he were a block of ice,
Melt in the sunshine, pay the price
Of being a child made of snow.
Such sad things happen here below.”
In a pool of tears she listed,
Twisting like a twister twisted.
Once a merchant, conscientious
And not in the least licentious,
Making money found quite easy.
Travel did not make him queasy.
His fair wife could not him soften
And he was away quite often.
Two years of this it came about
His wife was rendered up the spout
By someone she could not resist.
A son came from their furtive tryst.
Back from his long expedition –
What? How’s this? A new addition? –
The merchant chose to play it cool.
“Think not I’ve made of you a fool,”
His wife said. “One day, missing you,
The balcony I went up to
And I was sad and close to tears
And full of vague, distressing fears.
And it was winter, heavy snow.
I looked up from the earth below
Towards the sky. Then it befell
Some snowflakes into my mouth fell.
That snow reminded me of you
And I conceived. I swear it’s true.”
The worthy fellow in reply
Had this to say: “Without a lie,
No longer do I find it odd,
This love of our Creator God
In giving us a son and heir.
We did not have one to be fair
And if it pleases Him he’ll be
A fine upstanding man, you’ll see.”
And to the child he promptly knelt…
He hid though what he really felt.
The child was well brought up and grew.
The man thought: I’ll get rid of you.
And once the child had reached fifteen,
The merchant, prone to bile and spleen,
Came in one day to see his wife:
“Fret not, my lady, I love life.
I must take ship abroad again
No later than tomorrow. Fain
Would I take Agravain, our son
To teach him how these things are done.
A grounding he’ll have to succeed
In business. While he’s young, there’s need.
Pack our cases. Wake us early.
Say for us a Hail Mary.”
The lady, who would rather keep
Her son at home, wants him to reap
The benefits of life abroad
And not be, like so many, bored.
To this voyage she gives permission,
To this latest expedition.
At dawn the man gets out of bed
No longer with a heart like lead.
His wife though feels a kind of grief,
A worry that’s without relief.
Perhaps her son will not return.
What will he from this journey learn?
Through Lombardy they make their way,
In a Genoan inn they stay
And Agravain, like Joseph now,
To an Egyptian down must bow
And into slavery must go
To a far land he does not know.
The merchant, having sold the lad,
Sees there are bargains to be had
And he must make the most of them.
Imagine his wife’s sorrow when
She sees that he’s come back alone.
You’d need to have a heart of stone
To watch her faint, not sympathize.
Her son. What’s happened? Has he died?
The merchant tries to calm her down:
“Well, life goes on, they say. Don’t frown.
It serves no useful purpose to.
Liguria, hot like a flue,
Was basking in the noonday heat
And both of us were hot, dead beat.
We’d walked up to a plateau high.
The sun was ardent, that’s no lie,
And burned us with its burning rays.
I watched your son through the heat haze,
As if he were a block of ice,
Melt in the sunshine, pay the price
Of being a child made of snow.
Such sad things happen here below.”
In a pool of tears she listed,
Twisting like a twister twisted.