Gorse burnt bird skeleton laying beneath stark, white, crumbly just calcium a proto-fossil that lacks the hardness derived from aeons encased in mud becoming stone but this one will never be its future is dust mingled with sand
Close by lies a golf ball a wayward one that strayed from links to dune to deform in the blaze become blackend and split the skin peeled back opened to reveal the tight-wound elastic strands fused together yet penetrable with persistent small fingers and unravelled in exploration to be left in an untidy forgotten pile once the sac at the core is retrieved within which thick white paint to sqeeze forth and daub on wall or fence or kerbstone
This was the day after fire had torn through a thicket of gorse that I and one or two others had found ablaze burning red and yellow and orange hissing and spitting in protest radiating heat in aromatic miasma impressing all senses together and knowing our civic duty had run breathless two streets inland to fire red telephone box to dial three nines and deliver the news and wait for fire red fire engine to thunder by with shrilling bell then to follow on, running back to observe and to claim with pride our part in the resolution of danger only to face accusation that we must be responsible for starting the conflagration our shock and earnest denials not entirely convincing even when we protested that had we been the culprits then reporting the matter would be the last consideration instead, we were told we'd clearly done the deed so we could call out the brigade and though nothing in the end came of it, I was left convinced that adult thought patterns left much to be desired and were far too convoluted too suspicious, too impenetrable to be ever worth adopting
That episode taught me the magnificence of gorse ablaze that discoveries were to be made in the aftermath that doing the right thing wasn't always to be advised that overly suspicious too officious firemen were fishing for payback that if I were to be judged guilty of the offence when I was innocent of it then I had a credit awaiting in the bank of misdemeanor so in due course I made my withdrawal and lit the gorse in assembly at school we were told we should not hide our light under a bushel but I, not knowing what a bushel was lit mine under a bush I did it only once and though I had a brief flirtation with Fraid Her power scared me too much no great damage was done no human life lost or placed in danger save possibly mine
Cynthia Pauline Jones, 19/10/13
Fraid (the 'F' is pronounced 'V') is the Welsh name for the Celtic Goddess perhaps better known by Her Irish name Brigid. Amongst other attributes, She is Goddess of fire.