The Old Horses

ON a worn, dusty track two bays clop across a valley field with starched fluidity and dull manes overgrown, flattenedby a teasing breeze that dares not breatheon show plaits and squared quarters.

Only dark oaks notice them, arms extended

as if about to clap, and black rooks

cheer when these nags pass so quietly.

Sometimes, they pause and crop

whilst, in the next field, applause

for young horses that soar bright fences,

free from aches that plague old age.

Yet this does not move these veterans

as, at a gladed brook, they stop

where ripples flow into and out of the shade.

Mary Charman-Smith