Rabbit rabbit.
Rabbit rabbit.
He had the best view
Probably the best job
Sitting on the tractor
Churning up the earth
Turning up potatoes
The farmer's boy
A jammy, privileged son
With an eye for the ladies
And a wicked grin
He was a wolf
Make no mistake
Not somebody to turn your back on
In a darkened room.
We stood by, waiting
In our own designated spot,
A stretch is what we called it,
Tied around our waists,
A piece of hessian cloth
Torn from a sack.
It was back-breaking
Raking up the spuds
The cloth gathered in one hand
As a makeshift basket
Emptied into the waiting sacks
All standing in a row
From one end of the field
Unto the other.
I worked with my older brother
It took two of us to lift
A full sack up onto the trailer
Later we would ride back to the farm
Sitting on lumpy ‘taters
Singing shake rattle and roll
We were like extras
In a Rogers and Hammerstein musical,
Oklahoma
Where the corn grows as high
As an elephant’s eye.
We ate our tucker
Together
Lying on bales of hay
There was no music there
No time left to play
We ate spam sandwiches
Blackberries from the briar
Warmed our hands
On an open fire
In a brazier
Made from an old dustbin
Good for roasting chestnuts
And potatoes
To eat later
In the ten-minute break for tea
At three
Before the final stretch
Of gathering
When we would pick the last King Edwards
Of the day
And then collapse
In a tired heap of cheap labour
On those handy bales of hay.