The Tuesday Poem: The Puk-Wudjies
The Puk-Wudjies
They live ‘neath the curtain
Of fir woods and heather,
And never take hurt in
The wildest of weather,
But best they love Autumn, she’s brown as themselves,
And they are the brownest of all the brown elves;
When loud sings the West Wind,
The bravest and best wind,
And puddles are shining in all the cart ruts,
They turn up the dead leaves,
The russet and red leaves,
Where squirrels have taught them to look out for nuts!
The hedge-cutters hear them
Where berries are glowing,
The scythe circles near them
At time of the mowing,
But most they love woodlands when
Autumn’s winds pipe,
And all through the cover the beechnuts are ripe,
And great spikey chestnuts,
The biggest and best nuts,
Blown down in the ditches, fair windfalls lie cast,
And no tree begrudges
The little Puk-Wudjies
A pocket of acorns, a handful of mast!
So should you be roaming
Where branches are sighing,
When up in the gloaming
The moon-wrack is flying,
And hear through the darkness, again and again,
What’s neither the wind nor the spatter of rain?
A flutter, a flurry,
A scuffle, a scurry,
A bump like the rabbits’ that bump on the ground,
A patter, a bustle
Of small things that rustle,
You’ll know the Puk-Wudjies are somewhere around!
by Patrick Reginald Chalmers, 1872 – 1942
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I always loved this poem as a child, especially lines such as:
“When loud sings the West Wind//The bravest and best wind” and
“So should you be roaming//Where branches are sighing,
When up in the gloaming//The moon-wrack is flying”
The rhythm and the images called up are both wonderfully evocative.
The poet, Patrick Reginald Chalmers, was (according to Wikipedia) “an Irish writer, who worked as a banker. His first book was Green Days and Blue Days (1912), followed by A Peck of Malt (1915).”
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Lovely…thanks for posting this Helen. I shall look out for Patrick.
I think he is largely forgotten these days but you still see this in old anthologies.