Losses and Gains: Clywedog* (IP)
By Rhiannonw
- 5625 reads
*pronounced Cluh-wed- og
a valley flooded in 1967 by construction of the tallest mass concrete dam in Britain
Lost farms, lost homes,
a harrowing rupture
in relocation;
memories under water:
looking at the lake,
trying lifelong sights
to conjure up, re-capture.
What gains? The dam restrains,
holds back the glut that drains
from winter mountain rains,
and would cause frequent overflow
along the Severn banks below;
and sends it out months later
to quench the summer thirst
in hot and grubby Birmingham
and help the city cater
for its population’s need (and greed?)
not subject to the vagaries of rainfall
and unadjusted variation in the volume
wending daily down the Severn;
true beauty has been lost and drowned,
but something new of beauty has emerged
around and on this tranquil lake,
and hillsides that surround.
[this week's IP: Lost in the flood]
- Log in to post comments
Comments
The poem told me something I
The poem told me something I did not know before and showed the losses and gains of the giant dam very clearly Elsie
- Log in to post comments
What a shame that natural
What a shame that natural beauty has to make way for modern projects. I well remember my evacuation period in South Wales, One of the happiest times in my life. Bern. Love the Poem.
bernard shaw
- Log in to post comments
Lovely natural flow to this,
Lovely natural flow to this, Rhiannon. Really like this poem and the picture. It looks so peaceful.
- Log in to post comments
A balanced consideration. It
A balanced consideration. It's normal to get bogged down with history and loss but you've salvaged some of that, here on your upside. Lovely language, too.
- Log in to post comments
An interesting, informative,
An interesting, informative, and beautifully written poem, Rhiannon, enhanced by its excellent rhyming structure, and the picture.
Very, very much enjoyed, and thank you for taking me there I enjoyed the journey, no end.
Tina
- Log in to post comments
Loved the sense of redemption
Loved the sense of redemption that came with the last stanza. Powerful and informative in a way that few poems are. Great response to the IP, rhiannon!
- Log in to post comments
A really informative poem
A really informative poem Rhiannon. You certainly gave a lot of thought to this one, which paints a very vivid picture.
Congrats on the well deserved cherries.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
Hello Rhiannon,
Hello Rhiannon,
This is one of your lovlies too. One that I can relate to as we once lived near Hanningfield resevoir in Essex which is supposed to have flooded a village and the locals used to talk of seeing the church spire when the water level was low.
Moya.
- Log in to post comments
Hi Rhiannon
Hi Rhiannon
A lovely poem, with lots of history in it. There was a village flooded near here, too, and the story was part of a dramatization on BBC 1 recently - The Village. When one drinks the pure clean water from the reservoir that resulted from the flooded village, you forget the pain that was caused.
Jean
- Log in to post comments