by Bryony Hart
Bryony
Hart 28/10/16
Dedicated
to all those leaving Whitcombe House this year
There
was no warning: the hillside was bare,
ripped
and raped of years of growth.
On
our pilgrimage past Pierre du Sacrifice,
the
mulch-sprung pathway undulated as usual:
well-worn
steps, twenty years' worth, engrained into our gait.
As
we descended, the expectation of cool pine and eerie silence -
the
silence of thick tall growth that canopies out light from the forest
floor-
was
whipped from our memory.
If
only I had known -
That
final descent in April would have been savoured,
relished
and branded for future sensations sweet:
muscle-memory
of suspended ground
made
from years of pine needles;
light
elbowing through cracks in the thick blanket above;
shards
of light - moted and moving;
darkness,
shadows and exhilarating fear;
unravelling
daylight at the wood's exit ...
replaced
by a barren and shocking absence:
Nash-like
tree-stumps, fallen branches, withered leaves,
not
even a whiff of decay.
Beyond
decay. Fresh. Raw. A pillaging.
We
tentatively stepped through the debris,
soldiers
emerging from gashes after intense gunfire,
and
we ran our hands across the land's wounds.
Crouching,
we counted forty clear rings.
And
again, again, again another forty rings
reverberated
from the tight epicentral core
to
the calloused periphery.
Her
narrow six years were traced and compared;
our
four decades lay wide-open and exposed.
Forty
years ago a young farmer plunged saplings
deep
into this fertile earth.
Today
the land lay bare.
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