24 February 2024

The Turning World

Looking for a sense of perspective.....







Birds scrawl across the sky above the muddy flats of the Wash, dots on my vision, each to his or her own.  Distant trees and pylons speak of the old and the new.  

Conflated ideas of time rise towards the clouds.






It is the first time I have been out for three weeks.  My world is flat and empty.  It has rained.  The winds have thrashed against my walls and the roads have been under water.

A brief respite and I walk down the broken concrete path towards the flood bank. To one side I see a Muntjac pointing her dark eyes at me.  





A Marsh Harrier strafes the muddy field for hapless prey.





Along the hedgerow the blackthorn fires its salvoes, frosting the scrub in thousands of bright flowers, luring sleepy bees from their winter repose.







In the lagoon I spot a lonely young male goldeneye, diving amongst a waggle of heavy greylags.  The best is yet to come; I wish him luck in his watery life.






And not far away a pair of wigeon float along, bobbing sedately in the security of their partnership.  







The pink-feet have gone from the Wash now, making their ways to the deep north.  I miss their chattering skeins at dawn over the village, families of geese that whiffle together to the sugar-beet fields inland.  And I miss their returning flights in the dusk, their voices quieter as they slip toward their sleep. 

But there are plenty of waders out on the mud and at the tide line.  Bar-tailed Godwits:






Swarms of them, flickering above the Shelduck, Oystercatchers and Curlew that are not quite so flighty.






It is peaceful here.  Many times I walked this way with Amanda, and last Autumn I brought her here in her wheelchair, no longer able to support her own weight.  I am sad as I watch the world turning, as the cycle of life revolves.  But that is the way it is.  I am not alone.  We will all lose someone, or they will lose us.  There is no other way.

I know that.

But it doesn't make it easier.....

The clouds build up.

And then they will disperse.






At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;
Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,
But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,
Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor towards,
Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point,
There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.

T.S. Eliot
Burnt Norton







And as the darkness intensifies, peace comes dropping slow.  

Take my hand. 






 God is love.

Or maybe, Love is God.....






3 comments:

  1. Beautiful writing, as always x

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  2. A lovely finish and great pictures. Good to see you are out and about. Those deer are Muntys not Chinese. Hope you are well.

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  3. Your writing is so beautiful and touching Richard, so sorry you have lost Amanda. Please come and see us at St George's if you are ever passing, it would be lovely to see you

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