Sweet Southern Fields
Underneath a Mississippi sky

In the heart of a Sunday morning,
the church bell’s call rustles through the cotton fields,
where the hum of the sermon mingles with the wind’s soft whisper.
In the pews, aged wood cradles generations,
smoothing the creases of time-worn lives,
hands clasped with a grace that speaks of unspoken pacts.
Family dinners stretch long and sunlit,
where laughter rises like sweet tea’s froth,
and every plate is an offering,
every biscuit a silent testament
to the art of hospitality,
hand-me-down recipes whispering history.
Outside, cows graze in fields that hold the echoes
of ancient labor, and corn stalks sway,
tender arms reaching for the sky,
while cotton’s soft promise flees with the breeze.
Hogs root beneath the sprawling oak,
their grunts a counterpoint to the evening’s hush.
Beneath the expanse of an endless, starry Southern sky,
lightning bugs flicker like memories,
dance across the fields in a gentle ballet,
as the hum of the rodeo rings faintly from the fairground,
and the dogs lie sprawled, content,
their eyes reflecting a peace as deep as the land.
In this place where time seems to linger,
manners and etiquette flow like river water,
gently shaping the banks of community,
where neighbors help neighbors with the ease
of a well-rehearsed routine,
a steadfast fabric woven from threads of resilience.
Here, in the old farmhouses,
history is a living, breathing presence,
each creak and sigh a story,
each worn path a testament to endurance.
And through it all, the quiet whisper of Jesus
keeps watch,
a steady guide in a world both delicate and durable.
About the Creator
Taylor Ward
From a small town, I find joy and grace in my trauma and difficulties. My life, shaped by loss and adversity, fuels my creativity. Each piece written over period in my life, one unlike the last. These words sometimes my only emotion.



Comments (2)
Beautifully written, transporting us to a time and place we’ve not been but now we have- ❤️😁
You've captured the lull and grace found in the lazy and lovely southern belt. Gossip and chatter abound around the dinner table while outside the moss softly hangs from the massive oak tree's branches, swaying in the light touch of a breeze. I was born in the South and have lived here all my life. While it has some challenges (exhausting heat and humidity among the many), I love the beauty found in each nuance and soft lilt of speech.