4003: The Weight of Iron

farm tools leaning against a wall in a museum with shadows of imaged farm workers reflected on the wall

The Weight of Iron


They hang now in museum lights,
mute ribs of a vanished beast:
plough and pitchfork,
sickle with its patient crescent mouth
a wooden beam bowed like a tired shoulder.

But once—
they were thunder.

A man rose before the sun
when winter still stitched fields in silver thread.
His breath smoked like a small engine of faith.
He wrapped his fingers around oak and iron
and the earth answered.

The plough bit deep,
turning soil like pages of a heavy book.
Each furrow a sentence.
Each seed a dare to heaven.

He was not gentle.
Nor cruel.
He was a translator.
Between stone and hunger.
Between weather and child.

The rake’s teeth combed the stubborn ground.
The pitchfork lifted hay like golden confession.
The sickle—ah, sweet song—
sang in arcs of sun,
a crescent moon harvesting daylight.

His palms hardened
into maps of labour.
Blisters bloomed, broke,
became history.

What did he own?
Not much.

A house leaning into wind.
A table scarred with knives and prayer.
A wife who watched the horizon
as if it might one day release him.
Children who learned early
that bread is a miracle
performed by calluses.

And now—

the tools hang in reverent silence,
curated against a white wall.
Their iron no longer tasting rain.
Their handles free from sweat.

But listen…
If you stand very still
between plough and pitchfork,
you might hear it—
the low murmur of earth turning,
the steady breath of a man
who bent his back so the world
could stand upright.

Eυδαιμονία”: Frame Drum Improv in an Ancient Crete Cave byMarla Leigh

Inspired by an exhibit/installation at the Museum of Modern Greek Culture. Some images created with Midjourney; all writing is my own original work.©Misky 2006-2026.

9 responses to “4003: The Weight of Iron”

  1. Such a lovely poem honoring the tools that set man-made creation in motion.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you. I’m delighted that you enjoyed reading it.

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    1. Thank you, Cale. 🙏

      Liked by 1 person

      1. You’re most welcome.

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  2. back in the days when life was the gym- and survival the exercise…. loved this

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    1. That statement is so true. My parents and in-laws never considered a gym as necessary to good health, not only because there weren’t any, but because they rarely sat down except to eat. Glad that you enjoyed reading this one, Violet.

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  3. A worthy tribute to a wonderful museum exhibition. I can very well imagine your ink printed on the walls.

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    1. Thank you, N. I spent a good amount of time the other day ‘strolling’ through the 360° instalments. It’s the sort of museum that I love.

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