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Bread and Circuses

Chapter 12: THE LADY PHEASANT
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About This Book

A lyrical collection of short poems ranges from quiet country scenes and childhood memories to urban sketches and religious reflections. The poet renders streams, gardens, market sellers, and domestic interiors in close sensory detail while pairing everyday observation with moral and spiritual meditation. Animal vignettes and playful pieces for children sit alongside elegies, prayers, and ironic portraits of modern life, producing tones of humour, tenderness, and solemnity. Varied forms and concise portraits move between pastoral lanes, London streets, and intimate household moments while attending to time, sorrow, and faith.

THE LADY PHEASANT

Whom meet we, Betsey, in the wood? The Lady Pheasant and her Brood; So stand we still, to let them pass On oak-leaves through the tasselled grass.
Down dappled aisles of hazel shade They disappear along the glade, My Lady in her rusty gown, Ten children clad in useful brown.
But one fledged laggard stops to eat The plantain seeds at Betsey’s feet, Who plucks my fingers: “Mother, come We’ll pick him up and take him home!”
The nestling joins the hidden nine Deep in the copse; and I lift mine And bear her home along the lane,— “I want him!” still pouts Betsey-Jane.