The Old Man and the Land is a deeply moving rural monologue—a meditation on memory, loss, and belonging, told in the voice of Remigio, an aging farmer who speaks to his dead wife, Encarna, as his world collapses around him.
Set in the small, dying village of Padracos, the novel unfolds as a long, intimate confession. Remigio, now alone and infirm, watches his children return from the city only to sell the family home and uproot him from the land that has sustained his entire life. In a voice both tender and fierce, he recalls their shared years—love, toil, faith, and grief—while lamenting the erosion of rural values, the abandonment of tradition, and the moral emptiness of modernity.
Through his memories and reflections, Remigio fuses with the earth itself, seeing in it both the cradle and the grave of human existence. His speech flows like an interior river, lyrical and raw, rich with idioms, curses, and flashes of humor that reveal the dignity and despair of a man bound to his soil. As his children and their sophisticated wives strip the house bare, Remigio endures humiliation and betrayal, finding solace only in his conversations with Encarna and in the sacred bond between man and land.
The novel culminates in a tragic, almost mythic finale: Remigio’s discovery that even Encarna’s grave has been moved from the village cemetery to the city without his knowing—a final severing of roots. In his desolation, he embraces the empty earth where she should rest, merging symbolically with the land he refuses to abandon.
The Old Man and the Land is both a lament and a testament—a rural requiem where the decline of a man mirrors the extinction of a way of life. Written in a language of extraordinary richness and emotional truth, it captures the cadence of oral speech, the poetry of the countryside, and the eternal struggle between memory and oblivion.
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