THE river at the break of day
Far from the haunts of men,
Where mists of early autumn lay
Across the Norfolk fen.
And willows at the water's edge
Stand motionless and tall,
With morning dew upon the sedge
Where alders lean and sprawl.
About this early morning place
Of neither stir nor sound
Within the stillness there I trace
Some presence all around.
How little do we comprehend
The power that silence holds,
That somehow makes our souls ascend
As round us it enfolds.
In great cathedral high and vast,
Or church down country lane,
Some holy stillness there is cast
We feel but can't explain.
Among the hills new strength we draw
From heath and mountain air,
And in the silence of the moor
We feel God's presence there.
What lifts our soul with such strange thrill
When silence is around,
When all the world is calm and still
And solitude is found?
Great music is a lovely thing,
And larks and nightingales,
But only can their joy they bring
When silence too, prevails.
The willows whispering in the breeze,
A bumble bee in flight;
The drip of rain from woodland trees,
A barn owl in the night.
Earth's differing music rapture brings,
Yet this for sure I know -
For all the beauty of these things
'Tis silence makes it so.
Updated: 11:54 Thursday, November 29, 2001
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