AXE
For decades, it has been your partner in the enterprise. Like you, it has its scars. After you've split a day's worth of fuel for next winter-- this winter's fuel is long ready-- you clean yourself up for the evening and though you wipe the axe clear, maybe sharpen it for tomorrow, it still bears the marks of plunges into the hard grains of oak, hickory, ironwood, as you do, but visibly. There is a price, after all; you can see it in the iron, feel it in the bone.
SPLITTING STUMP
It looked so lonely, sitting there, my old friend, worn companion of so many labors, uncomplaining bearer of all those years of strenuous effort that we'd shared.
Nonetheless it had held up well, the old camphorwood splitting stump, from what I could see of it through the car window, just the top of it sticking up through the conquering weeds in the rain as we pulled into the drive. It was a lifetime away from me now...
At that moment the inanimate stump seemed like an old friend, I knew it so well. It was where I'd sweated and sworn, busted my jeans, got hit by a wedge, dodged the axe, wore out years of muscle and bone, rolled the stump under the plum tree in Spring, to work in the shade...
I knew it would wait there forever, that gnarly old trunk, it would wait through sun and rain, through winters, and I'd never be coming back to swing that heavy axe, watch the fragrant woodpile grow-- imagine feeling heartache over a splitting stump.
You feel the true values at the pinpoints of life.
8 comments:
Something so simple holds so much significance...
Hi Robert,
I was touched by the depth of your writing, the deep feeling, your poetic language... All the best from Amsterdam, where a storm raged over the land yesterday and everything is perfectly calm today.
Franciscus
You still write well and I am grateful to be one of your readers. "...heartache over a splitting stump." You beauty.
I thank you all for the uplift of your kind words...
I concur - from where I sit (happens to be Boston), your writing on this blog is to be one of the best, and most sane, things on the Internet. Many, many thanks for continuing Purelandmountain!
The in animate things that test us, that reward us, that remind us seem to be part of us, waiting, waiting. I do not know why you are saying good-bye to chopping wood, but having read your posts for years, I realize how important this part of your life is.
I know that ache, and I empathize with you.
Thankfully, your stroke has not decreased your ability to write with heartbreaking beauty.
Namaste from Calgary, Canada
You and your writing are a wonder. Thanks so much.
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