Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Littleholme by Gordon Bottomley
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Littleholme

    By Gordon Bottomley



    (To J.S. and A.W.S.)


    In entering the town, where the bright river
    Shrinks in its white stone bed, old thoughts return
    Of how a quiet queen was nurtured here
    In the pale, shadowed ruin on the height;
    Of how, when the hoar town was new and clean
    And had not grown a part of the gaunt fells
    That peered down into it, the burghers wove
    On their small, fireside looms green, famous webs
    To cling on lissome, tower-dwelling ladies
    Who rode the hills swaying like green saplings,
    Or mask tall, hardy outlaws from pursuit
    Down beechen caverns and green under-lights,
    (The rude, vain looms are gone, their beams are broken;
    Their webs are now not seen, but memory
    Still tangles in their mesh the dews they swept
    Like ruby sparks, the lights they took, the scents
    They held, the movement of their shapes and shades);
    Of how the Border burners in cold dawns
    Of Summer hurried North up the high vales
    Past smoking farmsteads that had lit the night
    And surf of crowding cattle; and of how
    A laughing prince of cursed, impossible hopes
    Rode through the little streets Northward to battle
    And to defeat, to be a fading thought,
    Belated in dead mountains of romance.

    A carver at his bench in a high gable
    Hears the sharp stream close under, far below
    Tinkle and rustle, and no other sound
    Arises there to him to change his thoughts
    Of the changed, silent town and the dead hands
    That made it and maintained it, and the need
    For handiwork and happy work and work
    To use and ease the mind if such sweet towns
    Are to be built again or live again.

    The long town ends at Littleholme, where the road
    Creeps up to hills of ancient-looking stone.
    Under the hanging eaves at Littleholme
    A latticed casement peeps above still gardens
    Into a crown of druid-solemn trees
    Upon a knoll as high as a small house,
    A shapely mound made so by nameless men
    Whose smoothing touch yet shows through the green hide.
    When the slow moonlight drips from leaf to leaf
    Of that sharp, plumy gloom, and the hour comes
    When something seems awaited, though unknown,
    There should appear between those leaf-thatched piles
    Fresh, long-limbed women striding easily,
    And men whose hair-plaits swing with their shagged arms;
    Returning in that equal, echoed light
    Which does not measure time to the dear garths
    That were their own when from white Norway coasts
    They landed on a kind, not distant shore,
    And to the place where they have left their clothing,
    Their long-accustomed bones and hair and beds
    That once were pleasant to them, in that barrow
    Their vanished children heaped above them dead:
    For in the soundless stillness of hot noon
    The mind of man, noticeable in that knoll,
    Enhances its dark presence with a life
    More vivid and more actual than the life
    Of self-sown trees and untouched earth. It is seen
    What aspect this land had in those first eyes:
    In that regard the works of later men
    Fall in and sink like lime when it is slaked,
    Staid, youthful queen and weavers are unborn,
    And the new crags the Northmen saw are set
    About an earth that has not been misused.



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