The Ritual Of The Plow
I grip the wooden handles,
And look out across the team,
In the early frosty morning,
As I watch the rising steam.
I know before the work is done,
My jacket will be replaced,
By a warming sense of accomplishment,
And sweat upon my face.
How many miles will I walk,
In the furrow, six by twelve?
Turning over patient soil,
Inch by inch I delve.
I hear the scraping of the landside,
And gliding of the soil,
I hear the squeak of leather,
And the feel of honest toil.
I know in this new tilled earth,
My daily bread I win,
As I swing around at the fields far edge,
And head them back again.
The team and I connected,
By leather, wood and chain,
Perform this ancient rite of man,
And it’s more than food we gain.
There’s a deep sense of pleasure,
In the feeling of the work,
And a contract between myself and land,
From which I cannot shirk.
I’ve fed the soil, all winter long,
Which now will feed me,
I slice it deep with the coulter knife,
And open it for seed.
I find I’m caught in a cycle of life,
Myself and the land I tend,
I’ve no notion of when it started,
And I cannot see an end.
3 thoughts on "The Ritual Of The Plow"
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Rhyme is such a difficult skill to master in poetry. What makes this so good is the ease in which the poem’s rhythm and sound fit the topic. I love this stanza:
“I hear the scraping of the landside,
And gliding of the soil,
I hear the squeak of leather,
And the feel of honest toil.”
I love the steadiness and naturalness of this poem and the references to the team (of horses)
I’ve enjoyed reading your poems.
I especially love the first stanza. The time of morning you show is my favorite time of day. It holds the power of new beginning.