The Chalybeate

Sunday 12 December 2010

The Way Through the Woods

Thinking about the renascence of nature exemplified by the way our garden path had become overgrown by weeds and accretions of rich black soil, I was reminded of this poem. Of course, this is set in springtime, but there is also that sense of combined hope and melancholy within it.


They shut the road through the woods
Seventy years ago.
Weather and rain have undone it again,
And now you would never know
There was once a road through the woods
Before they planted the trees.
It is underneath the coppice and heath,
And the thin anemones.
Only the keeper sees
That, where the ring-dove broods,
And the badgers roll at ease,
There was once a road through the woods.

Yet, if you enter the woods
Of a summer evening late,
When the night-air cools on the trout-ringed pools
Where the otter whistles his mate.
(They fear not men in the woods,
Because they see so few)
You will hear the beat of a horse's feet,
And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
Steadily cantering through
The misty solitudes,
As though they perfectly knew
The old lost road through the woods….
But there is no road through the woods.



Rudyard Kipling, 1906.

:o)



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