William Goodfellow was a man, not an animal. William dashed the hoe from his hands and stared at the earth packed beneath his torn fingernails. “This is madness. I am a man, not an animal,” he cried, and fled his field of corn and the blazing sun that burned his head. William’s farm animals howled and barked, and mooed and clucked in amazement, stamped their paws and hooves, and scattered from William’s frenzied flight. His daughters Patience, Prudence, and Pandora clung to each other and sobbed. “Father. Oh father.” Pleasance, his dear, dear, wife, wrung her hands and rocked in her chair. “Poor William. Poor, poor William.”
William Goodfellow ran to the barn and climbed the ladder to the hayloft where he flung himself down among the bales of hay and sobbed into his arms. “No, no, no. I cannot do this any longer,” he wailed. “No more will I work my fingers to the bone, work them ‘til they blister and bleed and the nails peel away. I will not break my back and burn my skin in the midday sun for nothing, for a pittance. There is a life for me beyond dawn to dusk in the fields, and drought and famine, stubborn mules and ravenous crows. I must leave this place, leave my dear, dear Pleasance, and my loving, unmarried daughters and seek a better life elsewhere. But, where? Where can a man such as I find a better life? What can I, a man unlearned in the ways of the world, do besides work in the fields, plowing and hoeing, and reaping and sowing? Oh, what can I do? Oh, God; what can I do?
William Goodfellow sobbed and wailed, his bowed shoulders heaved, tears trailed down his dirty cheeks, his heart ached and his bloody, blistered hands clenched and unclenched as his soul poured out its anguish and hurt. William’s mournful cry echoed from the barn, floated to the farmhouse, across the fields, and into the ancient forest where it subsided and faded and sank into the moist, living soil, unheard, unheeded, unknown. William Goodfellow was a man, not an animal.
You can taste the despair in this piece. The futility of never getting out of a place. The ache of just living when you think you might like to soar. The frustration of facing duty when you are weighed down by the chains. Good writing.
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Thank you, Kris. This is the opening of a novel. William Goodfellow will be encouraged to enter politics. Satire, of course 😀
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Of course!
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Such moments of desperation can push on the big things. Or vice versa drown in the swamp of empty dissatisfaction with life. I wonder what will happen next with William.
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He’ll probably go into politics and work alongside Senators named for the seven vices 😉
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