Josh Rimmer
By Jack Fritwell
- 4802 reads
Sometimes if I am abroad on a cold winter night I am carried back to the sweet, turnippy, cow dung smell seeping past Josh Rimmer’s clumsy farmyard gate – the gate that was stiff to swing, and sagged, scraping noisily along the ground when opened or closed - and to Josh with his flat cap and the jacket secured with twine like a joke, clanking by on the tractor with the worn out tyres. His dried beefsteak face, proud as a charioteer, divided into a gristly smile, reminding me far too late of the mist that rose from the black earth on the Moss, telling me to take more care over my goodbyes and keep them safe.
Yet my youth was careless with such things. Though some I kept, like the first taste of her lips sheltering in the shadows beneath the bridge by the railway station and the smoothness of her skin between cool sheets, other memories I have lost. Like the smell of the fields in which we played, the rag and bone man’s call, the excitement and forbidden pleasures of the travelling fair. In my arrogance, memories were no more than dogs, destined to follow in my footsteps. I was not their keeper.
Only now do I see the truth of it; how every memory is a sacred treasure that must be held close against the thief of time. I know now. But now is too late. I should have heeded the warning from that clumsy farmyard gate and from Josh, with his jacket secured with twine for a joke. For now I know the true value of things and the true value of all that I’ve lost.
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Comments
A beautiful piece of memory.
A beautiful piece of memory. I was disappointed when it finished!
I think you have an autocorrect typo in the third para - where/were
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Ah, sweet mystery of life, if
Ah, sweet mystery of life, if only we were old when young !
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This is lovely. Trying to
This is lovely. Trying to keep our memories is almost impossible. But the glimpses and the strange odd recollections that you hint at makes me want to recapture some things I half remember.
I too could have read more.
Lindy
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Hi Jack,
Hi Jack,
it was so refreshing to read this recollection of a distant past. I think it's only when we look back, do we realise that both good and bad situations are what makes a good story.
Enjoyed reading and congrats on the well deserved cherries.
Jenny.
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Engages all of the senses, so
Engages all of the senses, so much touched on in this sliver of memory, lovely lyrical writing.
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Hi Jack
Hi Jack
I agree with all the above, that this is a very well written piece. I felt drawn into its magic in the first paragraph. And your writing is a good way of triggering memories and preserving them.
Jean
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Jack...beautifully beautiful.
Jack...beautifully beautiful...this
Tina
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