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The Turn of the Meadow

The moment after one field, before the next

By Tim CarmichaelPublished 5 months ago Updated 5 months ago 1 min read
The Turn of the Meadow
Photo by Alfred Seiler on Unsplash

I've come to where the hay field ends,

and the land falls away in a long slope.

My feet feel the change in the ground,

a softer ground, with wild grasses now,

and the yellow of buttercups.

The sun is high and casts no shadow,

and the heat holds a kind of stillness

that makes a man stop,

just to feel the world stand still.

Behind me, the last of the bales are stacked

in long, golden rows. I know that work.

I know the smell of sun-dried hay,

the feel of it on my hands.

Ahead, the world is a different green,

a tangle of clover and ferns,

leading down to a stream I cannot see.

I hear its sound, a low faint sound,

a promise of moving water.

I stand here between the known and the unknown,

between the labor and the leaving.

There's a pull to both sides,

a memory in the warmth on my shoulders

and a beckoning in the sound below.

I have a mind to turn and go back,

but the feeling is stronger here,

the feeling of standing on a line

that separates one thing from another.

Free Versenature poetry

About the Creator

Tim Carmichael

Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Bloodroot and Coal Dust, his latest book.

https://a.co/d/537XqhW

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Comments (5)

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  • Caitlin Charlton5 months ago

    You captured the work life in the field. The bales stacked, allowing the stillness that makes a man stop. Wonderful. Then the letting go, going ahead and beyond. To hear the moving water that you couldn't see. Sounds like both a place and a headspace I want to be in. Not listening to the side of my mind, telling me to go back. But being submissive to the feeling of standing on a line. Sounds like the perfect moment of peace, no decision made, just somewhere in the middle. Waiting for nothing. If there's anything else I could say, I am just glad I found your writing. Nicely done! ❤️🤗

  • This was absolutely beautiful. Loved your poem!

  • Imola Tóth5 months ago

    I love to experience such moments you describe. They feel so short, though but the same time, like eternity.

  • Aspen Marie 5 months ago

    Beautiful!

  • Dylan 5 months ago

    Nice!

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