Plough mans Lunch
Clock watching, at blue mid-day
for lunch he’s heading back
the weighty plough-share rocks the cab
along a stony track.
The top fields turned. she saw him turn
it pink as skin in heat,
and shivers ridges when cloud
shadow’s past her feet.
Up across and down and last
he eased his steady plough,
up beyond the hills dark shrub
etched high upon its brow.
The rising blades flash signals
a code as clear as that
gathers gulls like doves
above the fields top hat.
Sea birds flutter like confetti
they’re celebrating toil,
some laughter in their calling
white-wedding with the soil.
She knows his step, his taste his smell
and all their ways of play.
They share the lunch, he is her clock
she is the plough man’s way.