The old forge
On the canal that’s half-asleep
Lie rose-pink leaves upon its stream
And gently through their cloth will seep –
Absorbed as in a languid dream –
The water autumn mist now whirls
And slows down to more sluggish swirls.
The ancient forge between two locks
Reflects obscurely the dark blocks
Of roofs and walls pitch-black in hue
Whose lowest part scrub hides from view,
Of sheds where huddled hammers gleam
Like crouching sphinxes broad of beam,
Shade-covered. – Days of long ago
Have bent the bearded gables low,
And cracked stone thresholds. Now quite dead,
The water bathes steps no feet tread
As soundlessly it laps and leaves,
And life stagnates, its strength recedes
Where the steep valley’s hollow lies.
Raising their coiled tops to the skies
Of paling azure, pine trees here
Intertwine;
From woods quite near,
As evening comes, a bitterness
Slides from each steaming branch afresh
Where shreds of silence dangle low.
What peace the lost glen in dusk’s glow
Seems to exhale! The forge – in pliers
Fashioned of nettles and thick briars
That choke each muffled echo’s blow –
Rests in a past without reprieve,
Reflected in the swollen stream
Where water midst the rose-pink leaves
Now dozes in warm autumn’s dream.
20 September 1903
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