Anthology From the Field., No.3: Old Towns
Poems on ghost towns, institutions of learning, Fachwerk, and an announcement on the next Wendell Berry Reading Group date.
Welcome to another Anthology from the Field, this time on the theme of Old Towns. I received some excellent poems from readers and I have included the ‘cream of the crop’ of these in the free section. Thank you to all who submitted.
The next theme will be on ‘Harvest’, so as usual, if you wold like to be in with a chance of appearing in the next Anthology From the Field, please submit poem(s) and a brief bio (which can include a link to your work) to haddenturner@protonmail.com or in reply to this email.
Also included in this post is a section for Paid Subscribers with some information about the next Wendell Berry Reading Group taking place next month. There is still plenty of time to sign up for this by becoming a paid subscriber to Over the Field. I can’t say enough how grateful I am for the support I have received.
Now that all that is out of the way, onto the poems…
Hard times befall
Old, weathered, and worn -
these are the stones that have borne
the weight of times forlorn.
Grey, black, and somewhat brown,
lining the ancient gas-lit passages
of this old, forgotten town.
Grooves etched upon them testify
to eras of prosperity,
now consigned to dusty books of history.
They remind of jovial years of plenty -
when mud mixed with the fruits of commerce -
when this hinterland lived and breathed.
Now, only what came before is all that remains.
Nature, permitted by the absence of life
to reclaim dominion over ceded land.
And once again the old owl chimes -
at an ever changing hour.
Hadden Turner (2024)
An Ode to Fachwerk
Down the lane is an old, half-timbered house -
a masterpiece of a dwelling.
Fashioned in geometric tones -
of black bisecting white,
a multitude of triangles pointing up to the heavens,
drawing my gazing eye upon high.
Down the road is another such abode
quite diverse from the first.
Age has been harsh to this old house -
its beams all buckled, bent, and worn.
But still, vestiges of colour offer themselves up -
creams and rich ochres offset by the heavy thickness of brown.
And these beams, which have faced the test of years,
still uphold their crown with grandeur.
Thus, the masterpiece remains.
And if I travel,
far across the Channel,
there too I will find
these same beams
upholding their own kind.
Patterns fashioned into dwellings,
and dialects expressed in facades.
Each different, though all the same,
a masterpiece of a house.
Hadden Turner (2024)
Watching Cambridge
Living encyclopaedias
throng up and down these
old cobbled streets.
Their journeys hemmed in
by walls of ancient Ketton*.
I watch as they stumble along,
always critiquing as they traverse
the knowledge contained within.
Weathering away the walls and streets
with their frantic pursuit of "progress".
Ever striving.
Ever succeeding.
Never content.
Hadden Turner (2024)
*Ketton is the name of the characteristic limestone used for many of Cambridge's old buildings
Reader’s poems
Jolon A hundred years ago, this was a lively and bustling town. Now, the hotel lies in ruins. The gas station is gone now, and the post office has shut down. When that happened, for most people's purposes, the town of Jolon ceased to be. The Episcopal church is the last building standing, a tiny white church, built in 1883, kept alive by a small but dedicated congregation. In the church, the bells are rung, prayers are said, and hymns are sung. At night, the traveler on the road sees a light shining through the stained glass over the door. And, from time to time, a member of one of the old families is laid to rest in the cemetery on the hill. by Rachael Denny Rachael Denny is a writer and musician who divides her time between Oregon's Willamette Valley, and the Santa Lucia Mountains of California. I liked how bluntly Rachael captured the sad dynamic that has plagued many of our old towns - their neglect and disuse - but offers us hope in the small church and its members who are holding on to the life of the place. But what an ending to the poem! as with each old soul put to rest in the ground dies another bastion of the community, and another nail is hammered in to the coffin of the town itself. This highlights the importance of supporting those old time members of small and dying communities who have chosen to stay faithfully in place - and perhaps to consider joining them.
The Professor’s Walk The walk to teach the morning class Is measured in unconscious steps That fall in smooth, familiar routes, While thoughts walk on at greater depths. I pass the new construction site And watch them place the glass and wire, All stretched on cold and naked beams, The ribs of some ungodly pyre. The sharp protruding metal frame Is built with all efficiency, A testament to modern man, An alter to utility. I feel it watch me as I pass And hear its unencumbered boast; It claims the future is a proof That will dispel the ancient ghosts. I pull my collar on the way To brace the chill November air; The pounding of pneumatic drills Enact the sound of vacant stares. But fifty yards beyond the spot, A visage meets my ruddy face; Its fenestration is a brow That nods a promise of embrace. The silent columns yield repose And guard the entry’s ornament, Of honest curls and patient lines That speak a word of compliment. A compliment that would anoint Our present groanings with the past, The oil of tradition’s vine, If carefully pruned, might still outlast The fashions of the modern mind; The coughed up phlegm of the machine. Anointings still, despite the times, Speak the ever near unseen. I climb the roughhewn limestone steps And touch the heavy wooden door; The halls are warm and fluid veins Whose vessels have a human core. I hang my coat and take my spot, And look to find a field of phones: The flick of eyes, the muttering noise, The busy screens, the silent stones. And yet, although the charmer pipes, The mesmerized might wake with prose; I clear my throat and set the text, An act of spirit to disclose. by Carter Johnson Carter has been a great encourager of my writing, and it is a pleasure to publish one of his poems here. I love his idea of juxtaposing the somewhat abhorrent new against the old and 'oikophillic' (as he mentioned to me in an email). And I want to bring particular attention to this line: "Whose vessels have a human core." which I find delightful. So many of our old buildings and towns have this 'human core' that we can readily perceive. It is as if they have been made to be 'lived in' rather than just providing a roof over our heads and a bit of comfort as is the aurora that so many modern buildings give off. Carter has a Substack here, which I encourage you to visit:
Canandaigua When we go to town in April When we step through mud and in out of rain When we see old friends and say, “nice day” We invoke a season The first warmth of spring against glittering snow And earliest of willow and daffodil and birch We ask about How we got through the winter, the repairs on the truck, The new fence put in, the new calves born We open space To smile like always, to remember our names To ask about kids and plans for Easter We speak hope For daughter’s graduation, for a summer of hay That something might be done about the cost of feed We claim our presence All us heroes and fools in a small old town Planting our fields on lands prone to flood We state what we must Winter’s shadows gone, first flowers up Over tiled roofs geese honking north Spring must be spoke. Nice day. By Sam Avrett Sam Avrett lives in a rural county in upstate New York, with dogs, husband, and a startling amount of canned and preserved food stocked away for the winter. Sam wonderfully captures the convivial nature of many of our small and rural towns: the remembering of names, conversations infused with care and the simple things of life, and the astute awareness of the rhythms of nature. And I especially like how Sam begins and ends the poem with the gruff greeting "Nice day" which is so characteristic of these places and their old-time folk.
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