"They say it's the tallest in the country, you know," the older man smiles. His companion's eyes follow the trunk, smooth and sheer, to the clouds in wonder. The topmost branches sway and he feels himself adrift beneath a giant mast, sails flapping on the wind as feathered cirrus fly through the blue beyond.
Just then a carriage bursts through the forest causing them to leap from the path. A bilious face glares out from inside. "Mind out the ****** way "Or I'll have you clapped in irons!" scream the spit-spattered lips, chins a-wobble petulantly above a too-tight collar.
"Begging your pardon, your grace," says the older man, doffing his cap and bowing as the carriage careers on.
The young man is speechless with fury. "*******!" he screams. "*******!" But the old man is clutching his sides with mirth.
"How can you laugh? "That fat pig nearly killed us!" The boy's agitation is making him dance. "Clapped in irons for looking at a tree?"
"No, no," chuckles the older, "for looking at his tree! "The height that leads our eyes "Up towards heaven "casts a long shadow over his wallet "And the weight which fills us with awe and joy "presses on his shoulders every day! "Ownership is a terrible thing, my lad!"
And they make their way home, free, through the forest, their forest, laughing.