So full, in fact, that I was forced to park in Reading Crematorium's overflow facility, a hefty walk from the main building. Now, this may seem a trivial problem to you in the face of other people who were having a far worse day than I, but bear with me*.
It being my 47th birthday, the event made me ponder my own mortality and my own inevitable encounter with Death's icy grip.
This pondering was not helped by the shortcut I took from chapel to car park across the not-so-tenderly mown lawns of the graveyard, where tombstones told me the aged of the deceased.
Aged 47... Aged 48... Aged 39... Aged 51... Aged 47... Oh God - Does nobody in this town grow old? It was only as I staggered through a flock of 80-somethings that I began to feel better.
Then, I saw these words - actually carved on an actual gravestone as an actual epitaph to an actual adult, the sum total of one man's life in five actual words and three kisses - that I felt Death's icy grip etc etc etc:
"Night night mate, see ya xxx"
In the somewhat paraphrased words of Mr Neil Gaiman: Death - It's the high cost of living.
And, as usual, it takes a funeral to remind you how alive you are.
* No, really, there's a bear and it's hungry and send help for the love of God aaaaaaaaaaargh
7 comments:
"I told you I was Sick"
Milligan S.
Despite the high cost of living, it remains quite popular.
You leave your mortality alone, mate, or you'll go blind!
I'd be happy with some kisses on my tombstone.
Boltzmann's gravestone does not bear his name, just the formula he discovered.
http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/cropped-Boltzmann.jpg
Ole Phat Stu
Wrong.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Zentralfriedhof_Vienna_-_Boltzmann.JPG
Tomb of the Wellknown Entropy bears Ludwig Boltzmann's name.
Ole Phat
You're looking at a cropped image. The stone bears Boltzmann's name.
Post a Comment