Are pressing the mountain brown
To see a bog the valley clog
And in deluge tumble down
Old trees which sprung when Homer sung
And wither'd heath and wither'd bent
Which bloom'd, as it may be presumed
When Roman hosts were hither sent
But the summer's heat the heaps of peat
Had dry'd in many a gaping chink
and when so dry the the clouds on high
Send down a flood to give it drink
And as each flaw with greedy jaw
Quaft with unsatiated thirst
The lightnings flashed, the thunders crasht
And its tremendous bowels burst
Charybdis' shore should never Roar
Nor Scylla murmur half so hoarse
Its works gave way & could not stay
But joined the deluge in its course
The scaly fry in myriads die
And eels full half a century old
No more can creep amid the deep
But helpless on the flood are roll'd
Leeds folks amaz'd in terror gaz'd
The river's contents beat their skill
But news went down to that great town
A bog had burst upon a hill
The learned men were eager then
That chymists to the hill should fly
for if the bog kept running still
Their trade must cease - they could not dye
So many went - the heath and bent
Were by their footsteps worn away
When they were there what did appear
For Crowhill bog had run away!!
Notes
Not the greatest of poetry but Nicholson would have earned many a drink reciting this in alehouses around the area.
The bog at Crow Hill, which lies south of Nicholson's West Yorkshire home in the nearbye village of Haworth, was drying up after a hot summer when there was a heavy cloudburst on 2nd September 1824. The peat absorbed so much water in a short space of time that it burst and was swept away through Ponden and the River Worth and river Aire. The resulting discoluration was so severe it lasted for 4 or 5 days and was noticeable 20 miles away in Leeds where the water was too polluted to be used for cloth dying because of it.
On the same day as this was written Patrick Bronte (of the famous Bronte family)preached a sermon about the same incident. Unlike the sermon this was not published for over 150 years until 1976.
JS
