Black Powder
The curlew’s lonely, plaintive call,
drew me to high Dartmoor
by way of moorland paths and woods of willow .
by way of moorland paths and woods of willow .
Ancient trees and
trackways led me to a legend,
to ruins of stone and to a powder, crude
and black.
Below Birch Tor, stonechats
nestled in juniper groves,
bees landed on heathers, whose purple mingled
with the yellow of gorse and broom.
I dreamed awhile in gilded sunshine
beside the Cherry
Brook of pure water.
Moss-covered branches of dogwood
laid with playful September shadows.
Nearby, within decaying buildings of stone,
I saw the ghosts of the gunpowder-makers,
leather-apronned,
copper-handled tools in hand,
working, safely, to
prevent some dark catastophe,
making the cake they called ripe charge.
I saw Indian
saltpetre, Vesuvian sulphur
and dark black
charcoal burnt from the moor.
I saw slabs of cake being beaten, sieved and tumbled,
heated by gloomstoves
and dusted with lead.
As smoke rose from tall chimneys,
slabs were packed in oak
barrels, leatherclad.
Watched over by the
skylark, they were carried
to damp tin mines, to clearance cains,
to dry powdered
quarries at Swell Tor, Foggintoor, Merrivale,
cradled, so very carefully, in the moorland ponies’ carts.
Cait O’Connor
7 comments:
Incredible imagery, as always, thank you Cait.
Love the pictures - particularly the his 'n' hers house - if that is what it once was.
Beautiful, Cait - and I saw tin mines when I was in Shropshire last year, so was able to put that picture from my memory, with yours - a complete picture, with your words.
........and I meant to say that you always have the most beautiful header images.
You do have beautiful Header photos! These words and images touched me deeply. I used to like to sit near the old tin mines and structures in Devon and Cornwall. They are sad, abandoned, but have such a story to tell. x
Dartmoor, a lonely landscape, similar to he Welsh hills.
Your words bring it to life, history and today.
Atmospheric Cait - I fulfilled a dream by going there not so long ago. Part of the ambition was to understand and experience writings such as yours -landscapes, sights and smells so unfamiliar to Australians.
I revisited earlier blog posts of mine from many years ago and your comments were there - thanks Cait for your time and visits. Much appreciated.
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