He was trying to make a chess piece.
It was his way of challenging himself
Of fitting in with the others busy making things
But his knife wouldn’t cut.
It wouldn’t cut into the wood
to shave a sliver.
He did not want to force it
That would be dangerous.
So he sought some help.
The scoutmaster looked it over
and exclaimed that it had a good edge.
So what was the problem?
It had an edge, but would not cut.
How could that be?
An edge it had, by his own hand,
though it was not a finished edge
to finish the edge must be his task.
With permission, he borrowed the scoutmaster’s strop
He must be patient. The finish would take time.
He settled in and began
Going in reverse, pulling the blade
First one side, then the other.
Keeping the balance a good edge needs
After 15 minutes of slow and careful strokes
The edge was shiny and polished
Like never before
Carefully he placed the strop on the bench
Taking up the gloves and the carving
Setting the knife in position
A gentle push and the shaving peeled away
He looked up, smiling wide, eyes laughing
Another gentle push, another shaving
His smile grew, eyes bright
Almost hopping about.
Sometimes patience is a good thing
The light shown in his face and his words.
“Now I get it!”
The edge must be finished in order to carve.
For him it was a realization
He could carve, something rare
If only he took the time to finish the tools
Perhaps the light will stay on
showing that many things in life
require patience to “finish the edge”
