Wednesday, 31 May 2023

Thor Sørheim: 'Flintøksa'


 

THE FLINT AXE

 

The first immigrants to the Cap of the North area hacked their way

through the coniferous forest in search of wild animals and warm inlets

suitable for settlement. While doing so, they held on tight to the grey

flintstone which increases their force. They could swing their arm

in a large arc before striking their prey. They learnt how to bind

a shaft to the stone to increase the strength. The flint axe taught the hunters

 

to think. For no one can think without having seen fish in the sea,

fire in the forest, bird’s nests in the trees. Their thought was fed

by smelling the earth, religion came into being after the touch of warm hands.

From the earliest settlers on the planet we can trace not a line

but a circle with groping hands in dark tunnels, rhythmic

ring dances, epidemics that were overcome by the right use

 

of plants and bacteria, laurel wreaths. Occasionally

the circles meshed to form slender spirals. From snail shells to

the calm in the eye of the hurricane and distant galaxies. We can count

the Fibonacci spiral and gaze far out and into infinity from Cern

deep down in the rock and the launching ramp at Stovner. We understand

how we can twist and turn to draw maps of the universe and find

 

new means of survival. When Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon

he said: That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap

for mankind. A leap that would have been impossible without

the flint axe. He did not mention the fact. But it was with a firm

grip round our oldest implement, with four closely placed fingers above

and the thumb as a lock beneath that the journey to the moon began.

 

* Armstrong insists he said ‘for a man’ and not ‘for man’, but that people could not hear the ‘a’.

https://time.com/5621999/neil-armstrong-quote/

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