Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE WATER MILL, by SARAH DOUDNEY Poet's Biography First Line: Listen to the water mill Last Line: "with the water that has passed." Variant Title(s): The Lesson Of The Water Mill Subject(s): Mills & Millers; Religion; Theology | ||||||||
LISTEN to the water mill, Through the livelong day; How the clicking of the wheel Wears the hours away. Languidly the autumn wind Stirs the withered leaves; On the field the reapers sing, Binding up the sheaves; And a proverb haunts my mind, And as a spell is cast, "The mill will never grind With the water that has passed." Autumn winds revive no more Leaves strewn o'er earth and main. The sickle never more shall reap The yellow, garnered grain; And the rippling stream flows on Tranquil, deep and still, Never gliding back again To the water mill. Truly speaks the proverb old, With a meaning vast: "The mill will never grind With the water that has passed." Take the lesson to thyself, Loving heart and true; Golden years are fleeting by, Youth is passing, too. Learn to make the most of life, Lose no happy day! Time will ne'er return again -- Sweet chances thrown away. Leave no tender word unsaid, But love while love shall last: "The mill will never grind With the water that has passed." Work, while yet the sun does shine, Men of strength and will! Never does the streamlet glide Useless by the mill. Wait not till tomorrow's sun Beams brightly on thy way; All that thou canst call thine own Lies in this word: "Today!" Power, intellect and health Will not always last: "The mill will never grind With the water that has passed." O, the wasted hours of life That have swiftly drifted by! O, the good we might have done! Gone, lost without a sigh! Love that we might once have saved By a single kindly word; Thoughts conceived, but ne'er expressed, Perishing unpenned, unheard! Take the proverb to thy soul! Take, and clasp it fast: "The mill will never grind With the water that has passed." O, love thy God and fellow man, Thyself consider last; For come it will when thou must scan Dark errors of the past. And when the fight of life is o'er And earth recedes from view. And heaven in all its glory shines. 'Midst the good, the pure, the truc, Then you will see more clearly The proverb, deep and vast: "The mill will never grind With the water that has passed." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MYSTIC BOUNCE by TERRANCE HAYES MATHEMATICS CONSIDERED AS A VICE by ANTHONY HECHT UNHOLY SONNET 11 by MARK JARMAN SHINE, PERISHING REPUBLIC by ROBINSON JEFFERS THE COMING OF THE PLAGUE by WELDON KEES A LITHUANIAN ELEGY by ROBERT KELLY CLEOPATRA TO ANTONY by SARAH DOUDNEY |
|