Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Writing Contest Winner! The Scribe by Jackson Bowman

I  am very proud to present to you another of our winners in our recent Okefenokee Heritage Center Writer's Guild Writing Contest!

The following story is by Jackson Bowman, a Ware County student, and our first place Secondary Story winner!  Out of all contestants in all divisions, her story received the highest score!  Congratulations!


Jackson Bowman


The Scribe
by Jackson Bowman



       A feeble flame flickered in the dark room, biting back shadows that wavered near the edge of the light.  A small, clay bottle sat on a desk, a stained hand dipping a crooked quill again and again into the ink until well past midnight.

      The Scribe hunched over, his tired eyes squinting in the dim light, examining the day's work.  It kept him up for hours past what he appreciated, and made his hands ache.  But complaining wouldn't change anything; no one paid much attention to him.  Etching out the last word in a scrawl that he hoped wasn't too lazy, he lay down his quill.  This book was finished and he could move on to the next.

      "But not tonight," he thought, stretching his arms over his head and massaging his hands.  Finally he snuffed the lantern and made his way outside.  The Scribe's eyes soon adjusted to the dark as he walked down the trail to his shack.  The sky was clear and a bright, full moon cast light across the grass and trees on either side of him.  His eyes scanned the blanket of shimmering stars above, each one of them twinkling and glittering, making The Scribe smile.

      He came to the end of the scrubby forest and stepped into a clearing.  In the center stood his home; a small, wooden shack.  He tumbled inside, hardly kicking off his shoes before he was snoring softly with a thin blanket beneath his head.

***


       This was an average night in the life of The Scribe.  Day after day, night after night, he turned out pages of calligraphy.  Book after book after book.

      Sometimes he scribbled complaints in the margins of the volumes he scribed.  Bits of his life hidden among the pages of history.  No one ever said anything about these additions, and he suspected the other scribes did something similar.

      Eventually the Scribe married and had children.  They were his joy and would greet him at the end of long nights - assuming they were still awake.  A lifetime passed, spent mostly at his desk, as both he and it grew more unsteady.

***


      Wrinkled and balding, the now elderly figure sat at his desk.  He sighed, setting his quill down.  The most recent tome was finished, and he should start on the next.  "But not tonight," he thought, snuffing out the old lamp and feeling his way towards the door.  The moon shone above him as bright as ever, and he stared at the shimmering stars patterned across the sky.  They danced in his blurred vision until his weary gaze dropped.  With his coat wrapped around him and his lungs working hard to breathe the winter air, he shambled home.

      Warm in bed, his heart slowing with every beat, he submitted to a well-earned rest.

***

      The next day a new hand picked up the quill at the old desk.

      A fresh sheet of parchment in front of him, The Scribe's eldest son began to write.



1 comment:

  1. THAT was worth the $8 pair of 2.25 readers, that I bought, instead of the dvd, we didn't really need. She can enter the next chapter of this, next year, with my blessing.

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