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Hostel Beach, Oneroa by Ivan Donn Carswell
The cliff sprang from the sea at end of Hostel Beach, if the tide was out you’d reach a tiny bay beyond the cape without wet feet, an easy stroll but too effete for blood as hot as ours. We watched it at full flood; a risky place to contemplate the games we planned, we walked the sand a dozen times, looked up the cliff and bragged how we would climb it to the top (it was closer to the village shop where we could buy the local wine). A modest cliff, perhaps 100 feet in height, a daunting sight, waiting there confronting us each day. I’d thought about it late at night when lights were out, it didn’t seem a challenge worth a dare, I’d climb it on my own unless a taker mad enough to make the effort worth a pair was volunteered. My plan was bare, climb it straight with no descent (just too insane), then stroll the mile that rambled back and bask in fame of bearing wine. So how could I decline the madness of the time, a dread impulse that shed all care; Kate had said along the way let’s climb the cliff the tide’s too high to safely make the sheltered bay. We’d planned to write our poems there, a cove which might ignite ideas although I hoped she’d share a creature comfort moreso than a verse and lift me from my dreams. That others came and climbed with me had settled schemes of adult games with nubile Kate, alas a fate I’d learned to take. But Kate, she never made it to the top, we didn’t stop, we climbed like ants with frenzied need and never noticed that she’d fallen by the way. She didn’t die and wasn’t hurt and yet she watched and wrote a verse that saved her passing grade; it was her anticlimax and our humiliation, she received the jubilation of our writer’s clique while we had cuts and scrapes and tender knees to show our deeds, and in some way I knew she’d never need to try to write again. © I.D. Carswell
1964, Oneroa, Waiheke Island, during a two week English Intensive.
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