In London Town (Mary E Coleridge Words, Ian Inkster Music. Poem by Dr Ian Inkster

In London Town (Mary E Coleridge Words, Ian Inkster Music.



IN LONDON TOWN
By Mary E. Coleridge circa 1896

It was a bird of Paradise,
Over the roofs he flew.
All the children, in a trice,
Clapped their hands and cried, "How nice!
Look - his wings are blue! "

His body was of ruby red
His eyes were burning gold
All the grown-up people said,
"What a pity the creature is not dead,
For then it could be sold! "

One was braver than the rest,
He took a loaded gun;
Aiming at the emerald crest,
He shot the creature through the breast,
Down it fell in the sun.

It was not heavy, it was not fat,
And folk began to stare.
"We cannot eat it, that is flat!
And such outlandish feathers as that
Why, who could ever wear? "

They flung it into the river brown.
"A pity the creature died! "
With a smile and with a frown,
Thus they did in London town:
But all the children cried.

In London Town (Mary E Coleridge Words, Ian Inkster Music.
Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Topic(s) of this poem: historical,lament,urban
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
the story here and the meaning aimed at by Coleridge seem clear enough, the short-sightedness of the urban crowd, the siddeness of death, the contrast between adult and child. I have kept the melody very simple with just the one contrasting bridge in the middle to evoke the speed of violence.
Ian Inkster January 2018, London.
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Ian Inkster 03 January 2018

Just to note that I have set three poems by Mary E coleridge (1861-1907) to music for Poemhunter, this present one, The Witch, and Unwelcome - the latter title I still think is absolutely not good enough for the poem so I re-titled it as a song The West in her Eyes, which to me is what its really about! Ian Inkster London January 2018.

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