07 March 2015

A Warning from the Past, and pretty good poetry

my late father was not an educated man, something that was a great frustration to him.  But he was extremely literate and read voraciously, things of all sorts.  He loved poetry, especially that of older vintage, he had little liking for free verse and some of the other fads.
I didn't really catch that, at least not to the extent he did, but I sometimes find some that is memorable. I came across a piece earlier today, a bit that goes back more than 100 years to the time of Kipling.  He's out of favor these days among the literati, not politically correct.  But worth the read.  He wrote about dikes and the breach of them.
Do you know about dikes?  My ancestors were not technically Dutch, but many did hail from the so-called "Low Countries", meaning in many cases that the lands they inhabited were in some casese below sea level, and the land they occupied was usable because persons before them had, at enormous labor, built and maintained systems of dikes to hold back the sea.  The quaint Dutch windmills that we often see in paintings and photos of that area, were there, often, to power pumps to remove water that had somehow seeped through.  It was necessary to constantly patrol those dikes, to quickly address any breach no matter how small, lest it quickly turn into a torrent.  Kipling uses that concept as a warning of the sloth that had, even then, taken hold.  Sloth and indolence, not only against the incursions of seawater, but of other things that the dikes, like walls and barriers throughout history, serve as lines to demark territory and civilization.
That lesson is needed today as well.

this is taken from here

The Dykes

1902
We have no heart for the fishing – we have no hand for the oar –
All that our fathers taught us of old pleases us no more.
All that our own hearts bid us believe we doubt where we do not deny –
There is nor proof in the bread we eat nor rest in the toil we ply.

Look you, our foreshore stretches far through sea-gate, dyke and groin –
Made land all, that our fathers made, where the flats and the fairway join.
They forced the sea a sea-league back. They died, and their work stood fast.
We were born to peace in the lee of the dykes, but the time of our peace is past.

Far off, the full tide clambers and slips, mouthing and resting all,
Nipping the flanks of the water-gates, baying along the wall;
Turning the shingle, returning the shingle, changing the set of the sand…
We are too far from the beach, men say, to know how the outwarks stand.

So we come down, uneasy, to look; uneasily pacing the beach.
These are the dykes our fathers made: we have never known a breach.
Time and again has the gale blown by and we were not afraid;
Now we come only to look at the dykes – at the dykes our fathers made.

O’er the marsh where the homesteads cower apart the harried sunlight flies,
Shifts and considers, wanes and recovers, scatters and sickness and dies –
An evil ember bedded in ash – a spark blown west by wind …
We are surrendered to night and the sea – the gale and the tide behind!

At the bridge of the lower saltings the cattle gather and blare, 
Roused by the feet of running men, dazed by the lantern-glare.
Unbar and let them away for their lives – the levels drown as they stand,
Where the flood-wash forces the sluices aback and the ditches deliver inland.

Ninefold deep to the top of the dykes the galloping breakers stride,
And their overcarried spray is a sea – a sea of the landward side.
Coming, like stallions they paw with their hooves, going they snatch with their teeth,
Till the bents and the furze and the sand are dragged out, and the old-time hurdles are beneath.

Bid men gather fuel for fire, the tar, the oil and tow –
Flame we shall need, not smoke, in the dark if the riddled sea-banks go.
Bid the ringers watch in the tower (who know how the dawn shall prove?)
Each with his rope between his feet and the trembling bells above.

Now we can only wait till the day, wait and apportion our shame.
These are the dykes our fathers left, but we would not look to the same.
Time and again were we warned of the dykes, time and again we delayed.
Now, it may fall, we have slain our sons, as our fathers we have betrayed.

. . . . . . . . . . .

Walking along the wreck of the dykes, watching the works of the sea!
These were the dykes our fathers made to our great profit and ease.
But the peace is gone and the profit is gone, with the old sure days withdrawn …
That our own houses show as strange when we come back in the dawn

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