Rivers
– givers of life, nurseries of civilisation and possibly the first great human
highways; and if one went with the flow rather than beating against the tide,
the direction was invariably downhill and seawards.
Millions
have chosen to travel so, through the millennia: to migrate by water as a means
of escape, as a search for a better life, in response to a spirit of adventure.
Whether prompted by necessity or curiosity, this launching of oneself into the
unknown was in many cases a brave and dangerous undertaking, an alliance of
frailty with powerful natural forces, an act of faith, a pioneering sortie with
wholly unpredictable results.
In
the 18th and early 19th centuries migration was
predominantly westwards. Impoverished farming families struggling to make a
living from poor soil would risk everything for a new start in a better land.
Thus it was that hundreds of men, women and children from Lancashire’s hills
and dales would sell all they had to book passage by boat to the fabled New
World. At a time when the Wyre River was still navigable by quite large boats,
they would embark with a few belongings and provisions for a hazardous voyage
and set sail from the banks of the Wyre – next stop the eastern seaboard of
America if they were lucky.
Today’s
poem is my favourite from the half-dozen or so I wrote as part of the Walking
On Wyre creative writing project last summer. It was prompted by seeing a
stretch of the Wyre River at Garstang than put me in mind of Millais’ famous
painting of drowned Ophelia - and the idea of transposing and transforming
Hamlet and Ophelia from royal Denmark to rural Lancashire with a back-drop of
unrequited love and emigration fell into place.
Garstang's Ophelia
In a twisting of the tumbling Wyre
inspirited by April showers,
between steep banks of cicely
smelling of aniseed and myrrh,
lies swollen Ophelia tangled in willow,
the river her bed, its ripples her pillow.
Romance brought low by poverty,
her melancholy prince, sad suitor,
set sail on Wyre tide, New Worlds to discover.
She wove forget-me-nots into a lover's favour
and cried hot tears to see him go,
quick with the child he'd never know.
Swallows skim now across her liquid grave,
wild ramson bows its head above the flow.
Her honeyed tresses look almost alive
in this rolling rinse of rusty peat water,
swirling in eddies - as if she's trying to break free
to follow her Hamlet down Wyre to the sea.
Thanks for reading. Have a good week, S :-)
2 comments:
Love this poem. Nessa
Thanks for the walking on Wyre plug Steve. Hope you will read this one for us at the Poets in the Park event at Wyre Estuary Park, Stannah on Sunday 2nd August.
I really enjoy re-reading this beautiful poem with its sadness and emotional depth. Thanks for sharing with us the thought process in developing it.
Great blog.
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