Sally's Family Place  - Mulberry Grove 
MAPLE LAWN
| MULBERRY GROVE | PARKER | RAYNER | WHEELER | NEIGHBORS | SCHOOLS | SIBS | KOESTLER CLUBS  HOME  -  Best viewed with Internet Explorer -

MG  Index  

Moore
 Godwin C
  Jas Wr
  Will Ed
  William 
  John
  William

Cotten/on
 Esther 
  Godwin
   Cullen
  Jesse
  Helen 
  Arthur
  John of Bertie

  Ann  

  John [N] 

 William 
 Walt&Tho
  SurryCo
 

  James of
  AnsonCo

Browne
  Sarah
  John
  John 
  Samuel  
  Edward  
  Edward

Brittle
 Sarah
  John

Rutland
  Elizabeth

  Rutland 

Williams
  Elizabeth
  Lewis

  John

Godwin
  Martha
  William
  Thomas 
  Jeremiah

Wright
  Elizabeth
  Thomas
also
  Pensie
  Stephen 

Lawrence
  Sarah 
  John
  John
   Robert
  

  family portraits  

  legends  

  house 

  interior

graveyard 

  oak

 Tyler 

 Raby

 Powell

Bracewell
 Robert
 Solomon

Borland

Kinchen

Mulberry Grove
Home of the Cotten and  Moore families
of St. Johns Twsp., Hertford County, North Carolina

The Water Oak of Mulberry Grove
img85.gif (111550 bytes)  wateroak.jpg (41205 bytes)  woak2.jpg (27817 bytes)

not standing today, but seventy years ago it was considered to be the oldest and largest living thing in North Carolina.

The Water Oak (excerpts)
by John Wheeler Moore 1833-1906

The water-oak, with green vast cloak,
And limbs sent far abroad,
Is standing here, from year to year,
With its shadow on the road.
The ancient stage-way, broad and fair,
That leads to old St. Johns,
Where long ago Ahoskie Ridge
Commended its first of towns.

This water-oak was planted here,
And nurtured well by God;
Its mighty shade at noontide rests
Upon the weary road.
The black and twisted limbs are strong,
Wide sweeping 'neath the sky.
Whereon the peewee hangs her nest,
When summer breezes sigh.

It is a Saul amid its kind,
So regal is its girth,
A perfect acorn must have dropped
To give it such a birth;
Some loving Dryad surely watched
It as it slowly grew
So broad and fair, and many limbed,
Beneath the arching blue.

No clustered palms on eastern waste,
More grateful to the eye,
A lordly monument it seems,
Of ages long passed by;
It lifts its huge and gnarled trunk,
  Far upward toward the stars,
And flings defiant arms abroad
To meet fierce winter's wars.

The storm may come in its agony,
And shriek as it hurries by,
The water-oak unharmed and strong,
Beneath the vaulted sky,
Stands like some soul, self-poised and firm,
Assailed by tempters dire--
Fast-anchored in a deathless hope
That cannot fail or tire.

Way-faring men with heat outworn,
Here pause at summer noon.
And gaze aloft, 'mid coolest depths,
While like some deep bassoon,
The bull-frog's heavy bass is heard
From out his sedgy home;
And here at dreamy twilight swells
The bittern's solemn boom.

I loved it in my sunny youth,
It cheered my listless hours---
I loved the peewee hidden deep
Amid its leafy bowers;
It grows in view of that fair home
Where I was bred and born---
The home I fondly cherish still,
Though long from it I'm torn.

Ah, water-oak! Old water-oak!
I love you well and long.
I would that I some fitting praise
Could lift in this my song;
There's not in all this land of ours
A broader fairer tree,
Long may your shadows stretch around
And shelter mine and me!

Hit Counter   04 November 2009

 

If you have found these pages of benefit to you
Please feel free to


 through PayPal
to help defer the expenses of maintaining this site

This is my working hypothesis - the way I see it as of this moment!!

SEARCH SALLY'S FAMILY PLACE 
       HOME PAGE   
    Ancestors 1st page       Ancestors 2nd page  
© Copyright 1998 - 2011 Sally Moore Koestler
Web-Master: Sally Moore Koestler, College Station, TX     E-mail Sally

  Sign My Guestbook  View My Guestbook

CARD OF THE MONTH