ON THE DEATH OF THE FAMOUS FLIER ON THE ROPE AT SHREWSBURY Fond Icarus of old with rash essay, In air attempted a forbidden way; Too thin the medium for so cumbrous freight, Too weak the plumage to support the weight. Yet less he dared who soared on wax and wing Than he who mounts to ether on a string...... Like Cadman, Cadman, (who he) Salop hero and madman Salop hero and sadman Super hero and badman. Spiderman set in stone At one with gargoyle and vane To challenge logic or the gods Going beyond the sickly Icarus And dead eye dick of a Dedalus. To the need, not for fire or flight, but both For the ultimate toy for man to manhandle In his final feat of destruction. Born in search of flight And freewill. DATELINE 1740, JANUARY An iron hard, big freeze of a winter The ground marbled with frost and snow Serenity Severn turned solid crystal A place for fairs, diversions, And the swishing glissandos Of skate edge and sledge. A winter, easy on the eye But agony for the underclad flesh of the poor Made poorer by the elements And the iceberg hearts of the witch-titted rich. On to the rage of this polemic stage Strode Cadman, slight of stature, but cable strong Steeple Jack, Jack of all Trades, Jack ‘o Lantern, Spring heeled Jack, Jack Daw, familiar of Rook and Crow, Raven and Magpie. Jack, the totemic name Supplanting insipid Robert No name for a sprite or free spirit or shaman of the spires. Astride the roof of this church He noted how we are bound in varying degrees, From the lack-limb cripple To those for whom their vision is Far from Blakes’ world of imagination and vision. He notes also the pecking order of sneering How church-bound gargoyles look down with contempt and ugliness Frustration distorting their features As they spew out the waste of embittering envy; How some with a foot in the clay still strive for the stars Whilst those mired in mercantile mud mock and ban them. He knew he must be Prometheus Unbound by flight to bring the flight next time in a transcendental levitation. A practical man as one who rebuilds fallen spires must be, He also paid the winter price The scrapings of the day labourer Especially from the church his patron Known for receiving much and giving little, No work, no bread the daily motto and cry. Time for the ultra funambulist to show the multitude a clean pair of spring heels. Casting a seasoned eye over the river to Gay Meadow, He saw over forty chains of hemp from steeple to ground, Multitude on river, Crowds on bridges, Couples on the bridle path, Funsters in the fields, And a goodly collection promised. Permission sought, Plans laid, Equipment tested, Pistols primed, Handbills printed. Wife sent to collect on pain of domiciliary visit. On 24th January publicity appeared Setting somnolent Salop into a buzz. “FOR THE BENEFIT OF MR FLIGHT, HIS FAMILY AND THE BENEFIT OF THE PARISH” “!This is to give notice to all lovers of art and ingenuity that the famous Robert Cadman intends to fly from off St Mary’s steeple over the River Severn on Saturday next, flying up and down, firing off two pistols and acting several diverting tricks and trades upon the rope which will be very diverting to the spectators!” Saturday the twenty seventh rises to air So clean, pure and virginal That it invites penetration By an expert. Ceremonially, he dons his clothes of office Muscle-revealing Colours-appealing A serviceable extravagance He calls his acolytes to process, Led by a small band with jongleurs and mountebanks, Names redolent of skill, fun, fear and other worldliness Already the sweet smoky smell of chestnuts and mulled ale, Are drifting their invitations through the streets. The entourage gains body in the taverns Where flagons are bought and ritually raised To the gladiator-martyr Smelling of fame and death. Skirts were urgently raised in a celebration of life and sacrifice. (October would bring a confusion of births!) The final stop: The Yorkshire House, St Mary’s Place Turned from tree-lined haven of quiet christianity Into the seat of Dionysian revels. Their God preparing boisterously for his apotheosis, Buoyed by the voices of the crowd, that seemed to lift him High to the steeple in a mysterious trice. All agreed afterwards that there was something new in the air Belying rational perception. From his platform he sensed as much as heard Mixed applause and silence, Waves of scepticism and faith, schadenfreude and empathy, Ascending in equal measure. He then knew what must happen today, He must fly or die. With more than usual enthusiasm, He descended the tightrope, Somersaulting, hanging from his feet, Flourish after curlicue till the bottom was attained, Inciting the crowd to awe and generosity, As his wife’s leather bags were filled and refilled. Ascending the rope, now an integral part of Cadman, He excelled himself in a volley of tricks, bells, squibs and noise. Attaining his platform to roars of delight, He announced his intentions Displayed and donned his props, Bells binding wrists and ankles, Two short planks strapped on as wings, As he lowered the greased groove so smoothly Onto this his final rope. He took his pistols in hand As he formed the perfect, prophetic cruciform. To mark the start a mortar was fired.... And I’m off In slowly gathering momentum. Pistols are fired to the building rhythm.... Am I falling or flying... I feel above Earth and its temporal magnets... Faster, faster...faster The cheers are from another world...faster even faster... The world is flashing its life before my inner eyes... Suddenly a change in the tension of the rope...... A gradual unravelling of a dream..... A snap and a final parting of the fibrous ways... I’m flying.....I’m, flying at last........My last..... The marbled sky is rushing to greet me. So fast...So fast The Gods are laughing sternly at me and mine... But still, I flew in the faces of their logic, And showed it could and will be done By some other Cadman, son of the jealous Gods. © kfg moore july. 2004
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