Banjo Paterson

The Maori Pig Market

The Maori Pig Market - meaning Summary

Pig Market Comic Clash

A narrator visits a twilight pig market in rural New Zealand and watches Maoris weighing porkers. A chieftain tries to increase his pig’s measured weight by leaning on it. An Irish buyer, O'Grady, notices and knocks the chieftain down with his whip. The altercation quickly escalates into a brawl between Maoris and Irish, punctuated by shouted epithets, and the narrator retreats from the chaotic scene.

Read Complete Analyses

In distant New Zealand, whose tresses of gold The billows are ceaselessly combing, Away in a village all tranquil and old I came on a market where porkers were sold -- A market for pigs in the gloaming. And Maoris in plenty in picturesque rig The lands of their forefathers roaming, Were weighing their swine, whether little or big, For purchasers paid by the weight of the pig -- The weight of the pig in the gloaming. And one mighty chieftain, I grieve to relate, The while that his porker was foaming And squealing like fifty -- that Maori sedate, He leant on the pig just to add to its weight -- He leant on the pig in the gloaming. Alas! for the buyer, an Irishman stout -- O'Grady, I think, his cognomen -- Perceived all his doings, and, giving a shout, With the butt of his whip laid him carefully out By the side of his pig in the gloaming. A terrible scrimmage did straightway begin, And I thought it was time to be homing, For Maoris and Irish were fighting like sin 'Midst war-cries of "Pakeha!" "Batherashin!" As I fled from the spot in the gloaming

default user
PoetryVerse just now

Feel free to be first to leave comment.

8/2200 - 0