Saturday, June 14, 2014

Pangur Ban

Of all I read at Trinity College about the Book of Kells and the scholars who worked and studied there,  the poem of the scholar and his cat appeals most. Shades of Shadow, Sealy, Tenspeed and other "helpful" kitties we've met along the way.


Myself and Pangur, cat and sage
Go each about our business;
I harass my beloved page,
He his mouse.

Fame comes second to the peace
Of study, a still day
Unenvying, Pangur's choice
Is child's play.

Neither bored, both hone
At home a separate skill
Moving after hours alone
To the kill

When at last his net wraps
After a sly fight
Around a mouse; mine traps
Sudden insight.

On my cell wall here,
His sight fixes, burning,
Searching; my old eyes peer
At new learning,

And his delight when his claws
Close on his prey
Equals mine when sudden clues
Light my way.

So we find by degrees
Peace in solitude,
Both of us, solitaries,
Have each the trade

He loves: Pangur, never idle
Day or night
Hunts mice; I hunt each riddle
From dark to light.

Resident kitty at our flat. She loves to play and have her ears scratched. 



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