It was the morning of the fourth day of July, Twenty Twenty-three, And I was running, alone, on Ilkley Moor. I could not take the path that I had planned, For it was stolen from me by the grasp of ferns. And so, instead, I found another way to travel west, My route, like life, a path of unexpected turns.
As I drew level with a group of trees, planted in my mental map, I turned, To head, almost a scramble, up the rock-strewn slope, Until, with the ground flattening all around, I came to a stone wall, And followed a well-worn path that lay in its shadow, east towards the radio mast. And there I knew my way, down the track they call the Keighley Road, With a view across the valley over Ilkley town that, like the passing of a life, would slip away too fast.
As I began my descent, his profile came into view, To my right, just off the track, though still some distance well ahead. A small, dark man, sitting, gazing directly across my path, Chin resting on hands, elbows propped on knees, his head straining forwards as if to peer through time to seek some other space. He remained there as I closed, his features sharpening in my sight, And I was struck how, like so much else in life, his presence was incongruous, for this did not seem to be his place.
I expected him to move as I approached, if only to shift his pose,
But he sat, looking west across the track, across the moor, still.
And as my eyes searched for detail in his form, I saw that he was too small, about two-thirds the size of a man, and so dark, yet without colour.
My brain was screaming at me that “something is not right here”, and I felt the heavy weight around me of the air.
I continued on, towards the point beside the grey stone on which he sat,
My heart was beating fast, prepared to meet another life,
but on my arrival there was no-one there.

(c) Tim O’Hare, August 2023
About this poem: This poem tells the true story of an encounter that I had on a morning run while staying on Ilkley Moor for a week. There was a rock on the verge by the track that I ran along as I made my descent to our holiday let. But as I came down the track towards it I saw the small, dark man sitting there, just as I describe in the poem and I instinctively felt that I was not able to recognise all that lay before me. Even now, more than a month later, I cannot let go of the fact that he was there and that, just for a few moments, either he or I was not in the right place.
