Tuesday, 22 December 2020

THE RAVAGES OF DEVON'S WEMBURY MILL...

 The Ravages Of Devon’s Wembury Mill…



The 

Ravages.

Wild storms of swirling sand

With dust and salt drifted onto the tongue;

Calluses were rough on miller’s palms from

Hauling chains and hefting Hessian, yet he wrote,

So carefully inside his bible,

With God’s guiding, instructing hand, 

Of

Ravages…


Fields of corn

Slid from a farmstead,

Away, down rough, steep tracks

To a shingle shore, 

Edged by the rush of a stream,

Where the mill huddled

Beneath its church protection

And braced itself for a storm’s furore…


Lashes of wind

Ripped at the walls,

Grey, of rough hewn stone,

To stifle the roar, 

Dredged from the blasts of the sea,

Where salt water mixed

With the fresh from the land

And smashed against the wooden, bolted mill door…


Waters then rose

Over the exposed building

Astray, washing down to the bed

To create an awe:

Wedged drift-timber and gravel scattered,

Windows were cracked,

As ducks and fowl, screeching, drowned

And the storm through Wembury’s cluttered mill-floors tore… 




Pete Ray


Elisha Gullett worked as the miller at Wembury, Devon, in the 19th Century and also served as a clerk to the vicar; thus he wrote about a storm in November 1824 in his family bible.





When I acted as miller Joseph Briscoe, whilst teaching at Sarehole Mill in Birmingham, we devised a plan that the local vicar was teaching me to write, allowing me to complete labels on sacks and address the ledgers.





An amazing coincidence…




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