I lived in Manotick, Ontario for over 11 years. It is a small village south of Ottawa situated on the Rideau River. I loved it there. The following is a poem that I wrote that tells the story of a tragedy that occurred at the newly constructed grist mill that was built in 1861. The mill was the focus of the village and provided Manotick with its wealth and prosperity in the mid to late 1800s.
The mill is said to be haunted today.
Hope you enjoy it:
The Lady of the Stones
When the moon shines bright on a cold winter’s night
As the wind frost chills the bones
While life is asleep ‘cept for the spirit that it keeps
Amid the cries and the wails and the moans
All alone in the night in the soft winter’s light
Runs a river that’s cries as it leaps
Over weir and some falls as if dancing it calls
For the lady of the stones on the wheat
There stands all alone from a structure of stone
A whisper of death and despair
A suffering soul who cries out for her beau
Lost, breathless, alone she will stare
A lady so pale in her death knell she wails
For her time that was so tragically brief
Her soulful spent mourns and her perpetual scorn
For her life that was wrought by a thief
***
Moss Dickensen came to this landscape whose name
Its mantle Ojibwayan speak
Of a land all alone in a river that roams
From Big Rideau to the Ottawa it seeks
Moss Dickensen possessed as Joe Currier confessed
Great insight and a vision to spare
One thing that he knew from this river would brew
Great fortune, great wealth and great fare
A partnership grew with Joe Currier, Moss proved
That a mill would be true to their dreams
A town that would grow from the natural flow
From the Rideau and land in the stream
The building that grew, stonemason’s cuts true
Majestic with a Scottish-like ring
The millstones were laid, then dressed and well made
From the skill that Tom Langrell’s hands bring
From the weir and the falls as the water is culled
By the timbers the current it bleeds
Directed through stalls, turn turbines, run sloughs
For the seed that a town dearly needs
Like grist to the mill old Manotick was filled
With millers and farmers and feed
Prosperity grew from raw powered hewn tools
From a river that flowed to their needs
Joe Currier was blessed with good fortune and zest
That he married the girl of his dreams
Ann Crosby did come from Lake George she did run
To the arms of her lover, she beamed
Yet fate has a way of having its say
When life is idyllic and sane
For the riches and fame for Joe Currier’s reign
Like the king of the Rideau in name
Yet on one fateful day in March so they say
In eighteen hundred and sixty-one
The first anniversary of the town’s new prosperity
On a day that should have been fun
Joe Currier is seen with Ann Crosby they’d been
From their wedding just one month before
Brimming with pride, a new life and new bride
His fortune had come to fore
With their wives by their side the men went inside
The mill had just started to run
The stop logs removed and the water gushed through
The turbines they started to turn
The shafts all-awhirl, the millstones grind shrill
The walls and the floorboards did sing
A deafening roar as the water gushed forth
Was music to the ears of these men
A danger in sight but blind to their plight
The couples they walked up the stairs
On the second floor stage, they stood in a daze
As the music did play through the air
Ann walked out in time oblivious in kind
As she looked at the marvels unfold
But mechanical whirls will tear off the swirls
From loose coats and those crinoline folds
Quick as a flash Ann faltered and smashed
Her head to the pillar and shaft
For her crinoline was caught in a running gear fraught
With danger and death as it laughed
Her cranium whacked like a walnut it cracked
‘Gainst the pillar and shaft and the gears
Her eyes all ablaze in a mad induced craze
Amidst the screams and the wails and her fear
The light of her soul dimmed slowly then cold
As the darkness had captured her being
Her spirit was lost to mortality’s cause
Forever to mourn at this scene
***
As the years fell away and the memories fade
And life carried on as it will
The turbines still turn and the millstones still churn
Like time, like grist to the mill
So stranger be warned of a town that was born
From a river and land that was tamed
By men of such strength that they went to great lengths
For some profit, some glory, some fame
For a specter appears from a window so clear
For lost lovers, lost souls and lost tears
Poor Ann all alone in her death spell she roams
Amid the pillars, the shafts and the gears
For alone in the night in the soft winter’s light
Runs a river that’s cries as it leaps
Over weir and some falls as if dancing it calls
For the lady of the stones on the wheat
© John Morrison, June 2005
What does this song have to do with the poem? Absolutely nothing but I love this song. The lyrics are great:
https://youtu.be/FHI-_HFdCuM
Have a great Navy day.
SJ…………………………………Out
Off to the pool.
Well done John…very well done
Thanks Ted.