Image c/o Isabel Gomez de Diego. It’s of an older light skinned man in a plaid outfit sitting down with a young boy in a Christmas sweater putting a red nose on his face. He’s got a party hat and is in front of a table with wine and candles and glasses.
THE CLOWN KING
This Clown King is called King Cricket
Who fishes for trout
Under the bridge that crosses
The Riaza river
In Torregalindo (Galindo’s Tower), Burgos.
When he can’t find what to fish
Goes looking for crickets
Reciting that funny song
From popular folklore:
“When the fox goes to crickets
The sacristan to thistles
And the clerk asks
How are we doing this month?
The three of them are screwed.”
Catching crickets is going almost always
With his precious grandson
To whom he cajoles by promising
A couple of euros if they catch one.
They usually go around the Castle
Today in ruins
Where the townspeople say
That the last one that inhabited it
Was a rich widow, Benita
Married to a profitless king
To whom people they called :
“Potato of Importance”
Together with a young barber
That se fixed her hair
From above and below
With ease and without scruples.
This widowed queen
If a man walked through her door
She came out after him with a tool
As a whetstones, saying:
-Come on, man¡
Come and enter the castle
I’ll sharpen your joint.
The man ran away
Mount down, shouting:
-I don’t know what you gain with the barber
How bad you are¡
-Daniel de Culla