Lunch On South Hess
At Princetown we set out. (There should be a Princesstown,
I decide. The Little Granddaughters would love that.) Overhead clouds are
passing, grandiose, pausing to monologue, wandering, yet intently, stage left.
We start with a hill, The Chap advises, then the rest of the walk will seem
easier. North Hessary Tor suffices to warm us up: me, The Chap, Houseguest Ben
and effervescent Dog. She spins in dry dung, chases birds she'll never catch.
How many people die here, Ben asks, after the instructions on bogland and
hyperthermia. He observes the cloud drama and pulls up his hood. Thousands,
says The Chap, kindly smiling, but less now there is good mobile coverage. He
has full kit. We have water and dried fruit. Dog chews some grass. We can stick
to the path, I say, let Chap go wandering. He has highlighted our map for a
rendezvous lunch. The path we drop down to was a railway, once upon a time,
when the quarry was a grand business.
My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!
Granite cut and fallen marks workplace and
homesteads. The quarry is a clear lake, otherworldly. People in tiny packs sit
gazing. I envy Dog her swim. It was frozen, Chap remembers: he had stood on the
ice just there. Prettiness and starkness overlay.
The Chap leaves the path, from here, attending to compass and bearing, leaving
those of us who would easily forget to add two degrees for the curvature of the
earth to follow a pre-beaten track. It's unfamiliar track, open, bleak, weather
worn, ancient. It cuts pale into dark foliage, past clutters of granite, past
lumps of iron age settlements, past sinkholes of former tinworks, stoic faces
of livestock. Rain shakes from a cloud that stalks northwards, muttering. We
walk behind it; behind us a bluster of cold air grapples with the sun's warmth.
We walk: it's been hours. A shape ahead reminds us of The Chap; he's early, but
it is him: or a convincing replica. In the shelter of South Hessary Tor hot
lunch is prepared. (Quinoa for me, Supernoodles for both lads. Dog has a sachet
of peanut butter.)
A daydream I have, of living in a remote cottage, almost unreachable. An end of
life dream, of lying out under stars, willingly renouncing consciousness. The
word 'end' is wrong. A transmutation, perhaps. Meanwhile, this life is exactly
as it should be, laden with appreciated moments. Not some advert-perfect
reflection: entirely flawed, hilarious: mine. I love it.
On the drive home we stop for ice cream.
Comments
Geo: ouch! Fell off my chair laughing at the image of our dog as a Baskerville hector. Our hound is rarely sombre, regardless of terrain.