Poems about places. Lancaut
Lancaut
Lines written a few miles
below Tintern Abbey
This is not a place for
people
To romp about in.
We must wander quietly by the
Wye
On sufferance.
Lancaut does not belong to us
But to the river.
The sheep and the crows are
At home here, and we intrude.
The heron looks and thinks
and has second thoughts,
Then decides he really ought
to fly,
To a rendez-vous up-river
Monmouth way,
Though he really shouldn’t
have promised to go,
But he sighs and lazily takes
off and slowly flaps
Along his flight path
northwards
A foot or so above the
flowing runway of the Wye.
We intrude, so go softly past
The chapel of St James,
A ruin now,
Just four walls with windows,
Though the gables still stand
proudly high.
Here hymns used to ring up to
the roof,
Long since fallen in,
And villagers would come by
horse, or by boat
If the tides of the Wye were good.
Now silence rules; no hymns,
no psalms,
No mumbled responses,
No yawns in the sermon that
did go on,
And on.
There is a seat up on the
hill
Above the chapel and the
stile
And sitting there you can see
heaven
If you just stop and rest a
while.
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