The Deil an his Prize by Sheena Blackhall
This new poem by Sheena Blackhall was inspired by an old map of Westmorland – now part of Cumbria. Sheena has incorporated these northern English place names into Scots, and turned the whole poem into a race with the Devil across the fells and moors. This poem has the sureness of a Border ballad and turns the ancient and ageless place names to terrifying account. A wonderful example of how the Scots language can stand on its own, in the sure hands of one of its major poets, and create an imaginative, even mythical story where there was nothing but a spread of these farm or landscape names.
The Deil an his Prize by Sheena Blackhall
As I cam in bi Bind Close
An roon bi Whittle Hole
I sweir I saw Auld Nick hissel
Ride by, tae catch a soul
He didna stop at Whelp’s Rigg
Flesh Beck or Barbon Fell
Tae Netherhaa he gaed at last
Tae claim a corp for Hell
Then up he yarked his sheltie’s heid
Tae Kirby Muir they sped
Ower Cat’s Hole an High Biggin
An eildritch daunce they led
The corp wi chitterin teeth cried oot
Bi Black Bull an Fell Gate
‘Oh Lord hae mercy. Set me free!’
Bit syne raise up Lang Thwaite
An ower the wastes o Westmorlan
He skirls yet frae fricht
The corp the Deevil reived awa
Frae Netherhaa, thon nicht
Sheena Blackhall