The field

The field

A Poem by alanwgraham
"

A metaphor for - whatever you take out of it!

"

The Field

 

how long had the man been in the field?

where had he come from?

where was he going?

these matters might be a mystery to us,

but the truth was they were far from his mind!

he was just ‘in the field’

 

one fact was certain, however

he was moving, but his progress was unbearably slow

head down, he moved forward laboriously

one step at a time, heaving one rubber booted foot

from the sucking mud, moving it forward a few inches

to sink back into the same grey squelching earth

only to repeat the tedious process with the other boot

 

the man kept his head down,

cowering under the rim of his waterproof hat

scant shelter from the perpetual chill rain

all he saw was the grey glutinous mud at his feet

when he did raise his grey and deeply furrowed face

all he could see was the grey and deeply furrowed field

it stretched as far as he could see

parallel lines of heaped earth a few feet apart

sodden ditches between,

reflecting the grey sodden cloud

which seemed almost within reach

and which in all directions

merged into the grey earth below

with no sign of emotion the man lowered his face

the field was the man’s whole universe

grey earth, grey cloud,

a grey man stumbling, step by pitiful step

across a grey muddy field

 

but we’ll not watch the man for too long

we’ll look away, concern ourselves with other things

in our own universe

perhaps later, much later, we’ll look again

time will have passed for us

but nothing will have changed for the man

 

he is still crossing the field step by step

below the grey sky that lours over him

for the man crossing the field

time has ceased to exist in any meaningful sense

his slow steps across the furrows measure his passage

through space and time

left boot forward, right boot forward,

squelch, squelch

left, right, left, right

tick, tock, tick, tock

 

but as we watch, he stops,

a fissure has appeared in his universe

a scattering of torn and sodden pieces of paper

lie on the grey earth, float in the ditch

he bends down and picks one up

an old photograph, the image dirty and fading

a young woman with two children in a park

he gazes long at the image, uncomprehendingly

suddenly a neurone sparks, he gasps

‘mum, Jessie my sister, and that’s me!’

he picks up another mud stained photograph,

this time a youth with a middle aged man

the synapses fire easier this time

‘that’s me again and dad, we went to the football

two- nil to the rovers, Taylor scored in the last minute.’

he picks up the last photo, looks long at it, puzzling

a wedding photo, the couple obviously in love

a memory wells up, tantalises,

then slips away, lost forever

he shakes his head and throws it back in the dirt.

 

he pulls his left boot from the dirt, moves it forward

the photographs are left behind

forgotten by the time he has moved his right boot forward

and so for the man in the field

time passes, or doesn’t pass

he moves across the field slowly, or has he moved at all

as the field has no beginning or no end

under the grey louring sky


© 2016 alanwgraham


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Featured Review

'The field'
alangraham,
'he moves across the field slowly, or ahs he moved at all' this line is one of the many which show how a person may function when the being is winding down. I think that people simply eventually burn out, mind and body. I liked your application of the contrast of former life with family and loved one with use of photographs. Life is precious.
Blessings,
Kathy


Posted 6 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

6 Years Ago

Thanks Kathy. My 91 year old mother has signs of dementia and it frustrating for her when she can't .. read more
Kathy Van Kurin

6 Years Ago

Someone near to us as well is going through the same thing. Your writing is very clear regarding thi.. read more


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Compartment 114
Compartment 114

Reviews

Tha nks again Neville. After i had written this I was trying to figure where it came from and then it just struck me that we'd seen the play waiting for godot recently. It must have been working away in my head. Yes, it is a very sad and scary affliction. I think the writing might help.
Regards alan

Posted 6 Years Ago


You have a real gift sir... I have read many poetical writes about the main character here and without doubt, 'The Field' is right up there with the best... I doubt that a single one of us has not been affected in some way by such a ruthless taker of lives and oft of dignity too, in any of its various forms and guises... I certainly have, I salute ya Alan and true.... N

Posted 6 Years Ago


I knew you in that storm
and memories flamed
and flew and became mist..
days unending turned to night
night had no soul
gave no succor
I loved you there
And I know you loved me
Once upon a time
Lost..


.............♥♥..........................................

J.J.

Posted 6 Years Ago


alanwgraham

6 Years Ago

Thanks for your wonderful review. Dementia is a very cruel affliction, particularly for the loved on.. read more
J. J.  Nightingale

6 Years Ago

Very well written ..and of course..I can relate... I am alive.. thanks..................and You are .. read more
Wife's aunt had dementia
She was in a home with Oak panels all round
She had been I service all her life
The family lived in an Elizabethan Manor house with oak panelled walls all round

Aunt now had the housekeepers job
All the nursing staff were servants
She was the boss
She was happy in her ignorance of reality

Posted 6 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

6 Years Ago

Thanks wild rose. It affects so many now and is terrible to see loved ones still there but 'gone'.read more
A story about dementia and its effect on the sufferer. It is a most cruel disease and causes much suffering which comes in varying stages. It is distressing for the people inflicted and their friends and families. It's strange how a break through can come once in a while, and I have heard that music can also bring the sufferer back. How joyful that must be, even though shortlived. I sincerely hope we are not far off a cure for this in the very near future. It is certainly a plague of modern times. You write very well on this subject Alan. Always good to read you. Hope all is well.

Chris

Posted 6 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

6 Years Ago

Thanks for looking this one out Christine. The issue has become more personal now with my mother in .. read more
'The field'
alangraham,
'he moves across the field slowly, or ahs he moved at all' this line is one of the many which show how a person may function when the being is winding down. I think that people simply eventually burn out, mind and body. I liked your application of the contrast of former life with family and loved one with use of photographs. Life is precious.
Blessings,
Kathy


Posted 6 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

6 Years Ago

Thanks Kathy. My 91 year old mother has signs of dementia and it frustrating for her when she can't .. read more
Kathy Van Kurin

6 Years Ago

Someone near to us as well is going through the same thing. Your writing is very clear regarding thi.. read more
This piece is so thought provoking, Alan. At first it took me on a journey that made me relate to the man in a sense that the 'grey field' was the mundane. Upon further examination and the evidence of the photos, or the fleeting memories, I realized it was about dementia. This is very intriguing, very well done!

Posted 7 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

7 Years Ago

Thanks very much. We don't really know how advanced dementia must feel but I felt the grey helplessn.. read more
You really did a great job describing the mind of one suffering dementia alan. How sad but true that they must trudge through their life with no color, no meaning, no memory....every day the same - just a tiny flicker of something for a brief moment and then it's gone...so sad.

Posted 8 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

8 Years Ago

Thanks for looking at this one Carolynn. Dementia is an awful affliction-on both sides of the fence!.. read more
This was very well written Alan.
Particularly the ending, that pieced it all together so perfectly.
I'm glad you directed me to this one.

Posted 8 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

8 Years Ago

Thanks for taking the time to look at this and your positive comments.
Regards,
Alan
I slow clap you to the stage Mr. Graham. As always this again is a treat to read. At first I felt like you were actually speaking of a soldier and your aim was to point the reader in the direction of how the life of a soldier is fraught with hardship and he walks on closer and closer to his end (tick tock) through the muddy fields of war which for them never ends while for those unaffected by it (directly), its gone after we finish Front Page and our morning cuppa. However the poem as you read it is so much more. You have made us all soldiers in the battle field of life, squelching through muck and grime, and looking back occasionally at our past selves and sighing nostalgically about the fact that we were different once, we wanted different things. The imagery used toward the beginning is one of death and foreboding it is ominous to say the least and as we proceed through the poem we feel as if our soldier, our hero cannot be saved. He is forever trapped and destined to a certain future, as he walks on, the field tricks him, he has not moved and inch and yet he is not the same person. It is so sad how true this is. Thanks again for this great read.
Regards
Lee

Posted 8 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

alanwgraham

8 Years Ago

Thanks Lee, This review, from a writer such as yourself, means a great deal to me. You will know tha.. read more

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Added on March 2, 2016
Last Updated on March 2, 2016
Tags: dementia

Author

alanwgraham
alanwgraham

Scotland, United Kingdom



About
Married with three kids, I retired early from teaching physics but have always enjoyed mountains. In my forties I experienced a manic episode which kick-started a creative urge. I've written a novel .. more..

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