The
Brook, by Alfred Lord Tennyson
I come from haunts of coot and hern;
I make a sudden
sally And
sparkle out among the fern,
To bicker down a
valley.
By thirty hills I
hurry down,
Or slip
between the
ridges, By twenty thorpes, a little
town,
And half a
hundred bridges.
Till last by
Philip's farm I flow
To join the
brimming river, For men may come and men
may go,
But I
go on
for ever.
I chatter over stony ways, In little sharps and
trebles,
I bubble into eddying bays, I babble on the pebbles.
With many curves my banks I fret by many
the field and fallow,
and many a fairy foreland set, with willow
weed and mallow.
Oh bosky brook, which I have loved to trace
through all thy green and winding ways,
wandering in the pure light of youthful
days….
The voiceful influx of thy tangled rills
how happy were the fresh and dewy years ….by
thy damp and rushy side.
Or dimples in the dark of the rushy coves,
Drawing into his earthen urn, in every elbow
and turn
the filtered tribute of the rough woodland
under either a grassy brink
in many a silver loop and link. So knew I
every rill that danced,
the netted beam on sandy shelves, the foambell
into eddies glanced,
the wanton ripples chased themselves.
A thousand suns will stream on thee, A
thousand moons will quiver,
but not by thee my steps shall be, for ever
and for ever.
I loved the brimming waves that swam through
quiet meadows round the mill,
the sleepy pool above the dam, the pool
beneath it never still…
The meal sacks on the whitened floor, the
dark round of the dripping wheel,
the very air about the door, made misty with
the floating meal.
I loved from off the bridge to hear the
rushing sound the water made,
And see the fish that everywhere in the back
current glanced and played.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tennyson was born in Lincolnshire surrounded by
windmills such as Heckington and Leverton yet wrote
poems about a miller’s daughter, a watermill and the
boundless energy of the mill stream that sped
through it. Every Tuesday morning I co-chair a
poetry session in a care home with a 98 year old ex
-schoolteacher who was born in a house opposite
Leverton Mill, watched the wheat growing locally ,
saw it milled and ate the bread baked with it by
the village baker. Tennyson, of course, is Esme’s
favourite poet and she recites all poems, but
especially his, in a beautiful, clear, bell-like and
expressive voice.
Sheila.