It is June, and we are surrounded by wild flowers everywhere, in Shropshire and beyond!
Most of these wild flowers were just growing on the side of the road, or in a hedgerow, and how many times would we all have driven or walked past them?
And yet each is a tiny miracle all of its own!
Wouldn’t it be good to stop and gaze at these little beauties once in a while and be reminded of how beautiful this world can be?
Tennyson wrote a lovely, simple poem about this experience,
with the lines
“men may
come and men may go
But I go
on for ever”
The river is always in movement, always changing. “You can never step into the same river twice”
said Heraclitus, and this was not just because the water is always changing,
but also because we are always changing.
“To live is to change” wrote John Henry Newman, and whenever
I wander alongside my local river in Shrewsbury, the Rae Brook, I feel the
excitement, the bustle and the change of the river.
There is always energy there. There is always life. It has power to erode the banks yet the power
is channelled around beautiful smooth meanders.
The change is a creative change – always being renewed, always being
revitalised by new water, new movement, new life.
I know rivers can cause destruction and chaos. They can be deadly and dangerous and take
lives.
But for me life is good alongside the Rae Brook. Life is good when it speaks to me, for itself
and also as a metaphor.
Tennyson’s poem goes like this:
I come from haunts of
coot and hern,
I make a sudden sally
And sparkle out among
the fern,
To bicker down a
valley.
.
By thirty hills I hurry down,
Or slip between the
ridges,
By twenty thorpes, a
little town,
And half a hundred
bridges.
.
Till last by Philip’s farm I flow
To join the brimming
river,
For men may come and
men may go,
But I go on for ever.
.
I chatter over stony ways,
In little sharps and
trebles,
I bubble into eddying
bays,
I babble on the
pebbles.
.
With many a curve my banks I fret
By many a field and
fallow,
And many a fairy
foreland set
With willow-weed and
mallow.
.
I chatter, chatter, as I flow
To join the brimming
river,
For men may come and
men may go,
But I go on for ever.
.
I wind about, and in and out,
With here a blossom
sailing,
And here and there a
lusty trout,
And here and there a
grayling,
.
And here and there a foamy flake
Upon me, as I travel
With many a silvery
waterbreak
Above the golden
gravel,
.
And draw them all along, and flow
To join the brimming
river
For men may come and
men may go,
But I go on for ever.
.
I steal by lawns and grassy plots,
I slide by hazel
covers;
I move the sweet
forget-me-nots
That grow for happy
lovers.
.
I slip, I slide, I gloom, I glance,
Among my skimming
swallows;
I make the netted
sunbeam dance
Against my sandy
shallows.
.
I murmur under moon and stars
In brambly
wildernesses;
I linger by my shingly
bars;
I loiter round my
cresses;
.
And out again I curve and flow
To join the brimming
river,
For men may come and
men may go,
But I go on for ever.
Do you have a favourite river? Where is it? What is it like to visit it?
Does the metaphor of change and energy speak to you?
Share your thoughts with me about Lif4Gd and rivers!