[ai] like [ɪ] stiff [ʌ/ ʊ] sun [ɒ] rot [i:] green [əʊ] wove [e/ eə:] death
[ɑ:] heart* [ei] weight [ɜː] were [ʊə/ u/ u:] grew [au] round [æ] flax [ɔː/ ɔɪ ] spawn
Death of a Naturalist
All
year
the flax-dam
festered
in the heart
Of
the
townland;
green
and
heavy
headed
Flax
had
rotted
there,
weighted
down
by huge
sods.
Daily
it
sweltered
in
the punishing
sun.
Bubbles gargled delicately, bluebottles
Wove
a
strong
gauze
of sound
around
the
smell.
There
were dragon-flies,
spotted
butterflies,
But best of all was the warm thick slobber
Of frogspawn that grew like clotted water
In
the shade
of the banks.
Here,
every
spring,
I
would
fill
jampotfuls
of
the jellied
Specks to range on window-sills at home,
On
shelves
at
school,
and wait
and
watch
until
The fattening
dots
burst
into
nimble-
Swimming
tadpoles.
Miss
Walls
would
tell
us
how
The daddy
frog
was
called
a
bullfrog,
And
how
he
croaked,
and
how
the mammy
frog
Laid
hundreds
of
little
eggs
and this
was
Frogspawn.
You
could
tell
the weather
by frogs
too
For they
were
yellow
in
the
sun
and brown
In
rain.
Then
one
hot
day
when
fields
were
rank
With
cowdung
in
the
grass,
the angry
frogs
Invaded
the flax-dam;
I ducked
through
hedges
To
a
coarse
croaking
that I had
not
heard
Before.
The air
was
thick
with
a bass chorus.
Right down the dam, gross-bellied frogs were cocked
On sods; their loose necks pulsed like sails. Some hopped:
The
slap
and plop
were
obscene
threats.
Some
sat
Poised
like
mud
grenades,
their
blunt
heads
farting.
I sickened,
turned,
and
ran.
The great
slime
kings
Were
gathered
there
for vengeance,
and
I
knew
That
if
I
dipped
my
hand
the spawn
would
clutch
it.