Note: As you will have read in my post two weeks ago, I am now posting every other week instead of every week. You can read that post (which has a few more details and updates in it), A Light on the Road, here.
Take Up The Tale
              by Malcolm Guite
              As I walked out one morning
              All in the soft fine rain
              It seemed as though a silver veil
              Was shining over hill and vale
              As though some lovely long-lost spell
              Had made all new again
And through that shimmer in the air
              I seemed to hear a sound
              As though a distant horn were blown
              in some lost land that I had known
              That seemed to speak from tree and stone
              And echo all around.
And with the music came these words:
              ‘Poet, take up the tale!
              Take up the tale this land still keeps
              In earth and water magic sleeps
              The dryad sighs, the naiad weeps
              But you can lift the veil.
From where the waves wash Cornwall’s caves
              Out to the white horse vale
              The lands still hold the tale of old
              Like hidden treasure, buried gold
              Once more the story must be told
              Poet take up the tale.
Tell of the king who will return
              Tell of the holy grail
              Tell of old knights and chivalry
              Tell of the pristine mystery
              Of Merlin’s Isle of gramaryre
              Poet take up the tale.
Take up the tale of courtesy
              Take up the tale of grace
              Revive the lands’ long memory
              Summon the fair folk, let them be,
              something of faery, wild and free
              Still lingers in this place
Lift up your eyes to see the light
              On Glastonbury Tor
              Then come down from that far green hill
              To where the sacred waters spill
              And shine within the chalice well
              And listen to their lore.
Yea, listen well before you start,
              Be still ere you begin
              See through the surface round about
              The noise, the rush, the fear, the doubt
              Though Modern Britain lies without
              Fair Logres lives within
You may yet walk through Merlin’s isle
              By oak and ash and thorn
              The ancient hills do not forget
              And you might wake their wisdom yet
              Who knows what wonders might be met
              On this midsummer morn.’
So I have taken up the tale
              To tell it full and free
              The tale that makes my heart rejoice
              I tell it, for I have no choice
              I tell it till another voice
              Takes up the tale from me.
You can listen to the poet read his poem aloud here.
Fall is a time for new beginnings. New journeys. New ideas. I often feel a fresh surge of traveller’s fernweh as autumn dawns. The elms are amber, their bark ebony. The aspens, gracefully Lothlorien-esque with their golden leaves and smooth silver bark. The sun tilts to the south, slanting its light ever so beckoningly, rays the colour of mead. This time, more than in spring, does it take all I can muster to keep from throwing textbooks, paper, and ink aside to heed the call for a walk.
And yet, fall is also the time when I feel most inspired to “take up the tale” anew. To pick up the languages laid aside during the bliss of summer, crack open long books, dust off bygone ideas, rethink old thoughts. To me, these things go together with the beginning of new ideas and new journeys.
Mr. Guite has graciously given me permission to share his poem, “Take Up The Tale,” with you. He is beginning a ballad version of the legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, and this poem serves as a sort of prologue. Guite has already begun to read his Galahad poetry aloud during his “Spells in the Library” on YouTube and you can watch and listen to some of them here.
Bits for extra wanderings:
- Malcolm Guite’s blog, where he shares his poetry. Each post includes an audio recording the poem.
- His post on “Take Up the Tale”
- His video on the same
- Guite’s “Spells in the Library.” These short videos are filled with little ponderings and readings of poetry and literature. I often pop in whenever I need a touch of literary refreshment.
Thank you so much for sharing this, Nicole. I have been following Malcolm Guite’s readings of his retelling of the Grail Quest in a series of short YouTube videos and I have loved them. What struck me as I listened was that I became lost in the story and my critical ear was quietened. I look forward to the publication of the complete poem.
I have not come across this introduction of the ballad before. What strikes me is the longing to hear older voices of dryad and naiad in the midst of the noise of modernity. I am reminded of the wonderful reflection on Logres and Britain at the end of C.S Lewis’s That Hideous Strength. I wrote about this on Brenton Dickieson’s blog as part of a series of posts that accompanied the publication of Arthur and the Inklings edited by Sørina Higgins and to which Brenton contributed an essay. I also tried to reflect upon the same theme in the last post on my blog as Caradhras denies the Fellowship passage across the mountains. Malcolm Guite longs for a reawakening of ancient voices. I was afraid of the power of Caradhras. I was also alone on Glastonbury Tor one Autumn evening and was afraid there too! Perhaps I am being called to courageously step out of the known ways of my life.
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As do I! It always stirs my thoughts when I think of how the earth holds history. People say things like “If these walls could speak,” but what if the earth could speak? Oh, the tales it could tell! “Though Modern Britain lies without / Fair Logres lives within.” England is rich with history and lore.
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