Random thoughts, poems, jottings, and as it says, musings. About anything and everything!
Saturday, 11 March 2023
The Abbey in the Oakwood
'The Abbey in the Oakwood', painted between 1809 and 1810 in Dresden, by German artist, Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840). Recently seen on Facebook, I used it as the inspiration for this poem.
The Abbey in the Oakwood
The monks have left, long, long ago:
Just ruins left, where once it was so
Full of plainsong; chanting in the day,
And night, from dawn to dusk, they pray;
At Matins, Lauds, Prime, and Terce,
Sext, Nones, Vespers pray for mercy;
Vespers as sunset creeping over hill,
Compline, end of day, all is still;
But the Reformers came, an end
To many years, and monks wend
Out far beyond cloistered walls,
And the monastery finally falls;
All the masses and priests fled:
Night is a thief of stone and lead;
And only ruins remain, stones left,
Weeping, unhappy, all so bereft;
An abbey fallen, only shadows last,
Where monks at refectory broke fast,
Laboured over pen and ink on book:
Now, just the cawing of the rook,
Settling on an ancient ruined arch:
An Abbey eaten away in time’s march;
Leafless branches gather round,
Amidst this once so sacred ground;
And yet, sometimes, I can still hear
The chanting of monastic prayer,
Soft footsteps upon paved floor,
And a creaking opening of a door;
Echoes of what was, once time alive,
Where long dead memories shrive;
And dusk rising, rain falls like tears,
Washing away all nightly fears.
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