Posted on 10/17/2015 8:10:25 AM PDT by ETL
On a rafting trip in early September, Christine Hutton, her husband, Richard, and a dozen of his corporate colleagues paddled to a flat, outcropped rock just a few miles from their push-off point at Jerrys Three River Campground in Pond Eddy. The trip had been sluggish; the Delaware was at its lowest level in some 50 years, theyd been told. The group, in its triumvirate of rafts, stopped to have lunch.
One of our associates stepped out to a rock in the middle of the river, and picked up what looked like a stone tablet, recalled Christine Hutton. It was large, and it was heavy. When the man began to read from it aloud, his friends thought he was joking - parodying Moses holding the commandments in stone. But then we quickly realized he wasnt making up the words. And when he turned the rock around and exposed the writing ... our mouths gaped open.
Compelled to try to trace the story of the stone, the Huttons took it from the river that day, and when the camping trip was over, brought the tablet home with them to Leonia, New Jersey.
The stone slab is about 20 inches in length and its upper portion is just as wide, estimates Hutton. It weighs somewhere between 40 and 50 pounds. The words, etched deeply in neat, block letters, are poignant:
Ive been called away from this place, my task here is done
I leave early but dont be troubled for my soul is always with you
Ive left behind a story, one in which [you're] all involved
And now it is your turn to fill up the final pages
My love will always stand like mountains mighty and unmoving
Look for me each night for I will rest underneath the stars
Hear me in the winds as destiny blows us closer
Forevermore
Its beautifully worded in a simple way, said Hutton. I tried to research phrases from it, but I could not find any trace of an existing poem. I could not link the language to anything on the Internet.
The Huttons daughter posted a picture of the mystery stone on the image-sharing site, Imgur. Thousands viewed it (actually 314,000) and hundreds commented, according to Hutton. Some thought it to be a gravemarker; others said it reads as a suicide note.
Hutton herself romantically theorizes that it was once a sitting stone in someones garden ... that a loved one left behind would sit on a bench neath a willow tree, remembering the one whod been called away from this place ... Perhaps high waters had washed the stone away, she surmised.
Its all speculation, of course, stated Hutton. The stone, she said, doesnt appear to have been submerged for long. Its edges arent worn smooth; the lettering is sharp. And those letters ... well, either they were painstakingly chiseled long ago, or they could have been done with a Dremel for all I know, she said matter-of-factly.
It could be a loving epitaph, or a craft project, Hutton concluded. Maybe theres a kind of throwback dude who lives on the river, makes these things, and takes them to market every week ...
No matter the tablets origin, the words it carries are haunting. Ive left behind a story ... and now it is your turn to fill up the final pages ...
The Huttons are making a plea to anyone who knows something about the stone to help solve the mystery. It was found on Sept. 11 on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware, in the general vicinity of Homeyer Road in Sparrowbush.
Some bloggers on the Imgur site have commented that removing the stone from its riverbed is tantamount to invoking a curse of sorts. Im not superstitious, said Hutton. However, if the owner of the stone cant be located, and if the consensus of the people of the area is that it should be put back in the river, then thats exactly what well do. We want to have peace with it.
Ping
Not far from where I grew up in Port Jervis.
Pong.
Your turn...
;^)
“I leave early”. Written in the present tense. Sounds a little like a suicide note.
Someone’s idea of art or, for that matter humor.
Just because it’s carved into a piece of stone doesn’t make it any less just another piece of Grafitti or garbage thrown into the river.
There will be those that argue this a piece of art or poetry, but I view it differently
Even stupid people have creative/artistic capability.
But it amuses me to no end the possible final thought rolling through the author’s mind in the remaining moments of consciousness after he jumped into the river, the stone tablet weighing him or her down:
“SHIT! I didn’t sign my stone!”
Or, from another perspective, the young prankster awaiting the right time to claim authorship of the discarded, poorly-executed prank.
Whatever. If it were written in 18th century prose and were well-weathered, I’d be more interested.
Thx for the amusement...
Sounds like it could’ve been on a headstone.
The M is unique. I don't think it's old. The words, punctuation, printing and text is hardly ancient or clever.
Sounds like a 20 year old runaway.....and fairly recent.
Might even be just a ruse. I only say that because of what I did with my masonry tools in Virginia. :-)
WAY to serious.
I’m a bit of a romantic in my own right, but the stone is far more ‘amusing’ from my own POV than it is ‘romantic’...
though weary be
the shapeless loneliness
knowingly held
in love and light,
does casts in stone
the shape of hope
where there once
was naught
A gravestone.
That looks like a proportionally spaced font, probably Palatino or Times New Roman, and run through the river for 15 generations to make them look old. ;-)
-PJ
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