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In 1075 Emma de Gauder held this castle against the king

Horse

Location: Norwich Castle, Castle Hill, Norwich, NR1 3JU

Map showing location of Norwich Castle

Inspired by the story of 16-year-old Emma de Gauder, who held the castle when it was besieged by the king in 1075. Her husband, Ralph, had not asked for approval for their marriage, and fled the castle, leaving Emma to negotiate.

Written with help from Kendra, Assyl and Kitty.

Listen to the poem

Read the poem

The castle is not even stone yet 
and it is surrounded by men.  
In the night, a horse rides north east 
for the coast and leaves a girl in charge.  
Too busy to pine at the battlements, 
Emma is counting grain and heads. 

They all see her as a lamb, a girl  
who does not know her own mind, 

incapable of vanquishing a battalion 
of wolves. But she knows she is a unicorn  
- courageous and ready to protect 
her people. Her husband is a hyena. 
That's probably why the King disapproves. 
He knows she will discipline him,  
encourage him to stand up for himself. 
Emma's husband never listens - he avoids 
hard labour like the plague that hasn't happened yet 
and bolts at the slightest sniff of conflict. 

Winter is on the horizon.  
They've hunted as best they can, 
children, women, men too old or sickly to fight. 
Emma spends morning, noon, night poring over  
the ledgers in the castle yet-to-come. 
Horses. They carry their masters into battle,  
die by sword or fatigue just as men do,  
but God gave them a constitution less  
hearty than that of their riders. Emma sees the beasts  

from her window, thin and sad,  
when an offer whispers itself 
to life in the back of her head. Flesh is flesh;  
even Christ gave 
his flesh to his followers to save them  
from damnation; and what is 
hunger if not the damnation of the body?  

 
With a butcher's knife  
in one hand and a quill in another, she flexes  
her French and begins negotiating. 

In a moment of inspiration,  
Emma releases ants into the castle,  
the chambers that, were the castle to fall,  
would belong to the King. She hopes their wisdom 
rubs off on her and drives the King to distraction.  
Even when her people are gone,  
their power lives in the strength of the ants 
who, despite their size, carry the weight 
of collective responsibility better than  
any person.  

Three months is a long time 
to be without her husband but he  
is a coward and Emma is brave 
and proves she does not need him.  
Her people do not starve, the castle 
does not fall; they have forty days  
to leave and they do,  
the city and its spirit remaining intact. 

Follow the trail

Stay at Norwich Castle for poem 2: A crane has arrived to sit on the castle.

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