That’s what we were given.
Some placed a pile of wood, lit
the two matches and stood back
awaiting a blaze as if a miracle
was about to happen.
Others carefully cut tinder,
but if it was damp in any way,
failure.
The clever ones on a grey wet day
hunted recesses: spider’s webs,
fluff, dust, wood chippings;
anything as long as it was dry.
Then honed their axes so it could shave
as if we had any hair at eleven years of age;
made a ball of the stuff
sliced away at a dry stick
to create a bundle of shavings
elevated the pile onto a dry rock
shaded it from the wind
and lit the first match
in the confines of their hat.
In later years this discipline paid off
on barren windswept moors
after a long hike when we longed
for warm soup, a tin of Nescafe
with thick condensed milk
and although we harboured a whole
box of matches on our person
it had been ingrained
in us that each one was life.
A damp box of matches foredoomed
us to hunger and a miserable night
without a warm rock to hug.
Two Matches
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- Posts: 1986
- Joined: 02 Mar 2016, 18:07
- Location: Between the mountains and the sea
Re: Two Matches
I like this little tale of survival.
I had a Native American friend in art class who invited me to an inipi or sweat. He started a fire with fine shavings and flint and skillfully got it blazing to heat the grandfathers or rocks.
I had a Native American friend in art class who invited me to an inipi or sweat. He started a fire with fine shavings and flint and skillfully got it blazing to heat the grandfathers or rocks.
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- Posts: 1986
- Joined: 02 Mar 2016, 18:07
- Location: Between the mountains and the sea
Re: Two Matches
You were honoured Billy
a special experience.
a special experience.