Thursday, March 13, 2025

The Brotherhood of Stone

 

When I tell you, the man who lives on those hills

is made of the same limestone grey, white karst

he stands on; the same rock that butts through the thin

grass cover of his fields; that is the material, he and his

forefathers, back to neolithic times, used to construct

the labyrinthine network of walls thrown, like a fisherman’s

net, onto the western landscape; it’s not a poetic conceit.

I have seen him standing in spring-limpid sunlight,

extending upward, undifferentiated from the bedrock; legs and

arms outstretched, trellised by briar and blackthorn, and

the language of that place, in a script of stonechats, robins and

chaffinches, rewriting itself over and over across his body.

I have seen him weather as limestone weathers, an outcrop

indistinguishable from the others; with the flight of sky above,

the rolling earth beneath; he, on that interface, also remains

undisturbed and unchanged. I have seen that the flow of water has

shaped him to his place; the hindrance that might have been,

smoothed now to a belonging, to a brotherhood of stone.

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