The Mill
Water
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Only the sound remains of the old
mill; gone is the wheel;
on the prone roof and walls the
nettle reigns.
Water that toils no more dangles
white locks and, falling,
mocks the music of the
mill-wheel’s busy roar.
Pretty to see, by day its sound is
naught
compared with thought and talk and
noise of labour and of play.
Night makes the difference; in
calm moonlight,
gloom infinite, the sound comes
surging in upon the sense:
Solitude, company, when it is
night -
grief or delight by it must
haunted or concluded be.
Often the silentness has but this
one companion;
wherever one creeps in, the other
is.
Sometimes a thought is drowned by
it, sometimes out of it climbs;
All thoughts begin or end upon
this sound.
Only the idle foam of water
falling, changelessly recalling,
where once men had a work-place
and a home.
Edward Thomas.
3
March 1878 – 9 April 1917
Photograph by John Mears of the Old Mill on the
Bridge, Vernon, France.