Natural ManA Poem by David Lewis PagetThe
man I saw at the edge of the wood Had
flowers, twined in his hair, His
jerkin was both green and ragged His
legs were brown and bare, The
boots he wore were a journeyman’s Had seen much better a day, He
watched the encroaching housing Then
he turned in sadness away. I
found him later, deep in a dell Where
he sat on a fallen tree, His
head was cradled, deep in his hands In
a picture of misery, I
said: ‘What seems to ail you, friend, Is
there anything I can do?’ He
muttered something under his breath, ‘It’s
almost too late for you!’ I
sat and faced him, sat on the stump Of
a tree that was felled before, Cut
down for somebody’s firewood By
a rattling steel chainsaw, He
said, ‘You’re just the last of the crew Destroying
the lay of the land, There
once was a time when the world was new, We
tended the earth by hand.’ He
reached on down for a fist of dirt That
was rich, and dark and brown, Then
let it slip through his fingers Slowly,
back to the fertile ground, He
raised a finger, ‘listen to that It’s
the cruel sound of fate, You
call it urban development, I
call it the sound of hate!’ The
bulldozers were felling the trees At
the further end of the wood, I
could hear the shrieking, creaking cries As the trees came down for good. ‘This
forest covered a hundred miles When
the lord would ride to hounds, But
he always left the trees to stand In
the Royal Hunting Grounds.’ ‘And
men would cherish the crops they grew, They
would reap what they had earned, For
man had risen up out of the earth And
to earth he would return. But
then you came with your railway lines And
you cut the land in two, You
dug canals through the pasture fine And
as nature died, you grew.’ ‘The
land was filling with engineers With
iron and steel they toiled, They
had no thought for the scenery For
every scene, they spoiled, They’d
lost that link with the humble earth That
their fathers had before, But
gloried in their cities and towns As
they linked up, shore to shore.’ ‘And
here you come to destroy the rest By
way of your huge machines, To
tear apart at the tender heart Of
a world now lost in dreams.’ The
man then stood, turned to the wood And
waved, was lost to view, ‘I
trust you’ll enjoy your new estate When
nature has done with you!’ David
Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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