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The old man gathered every matchstick he could find. At first they took him for one of those model builders of castles and ships. But no one ever saw him create anything, not a single piece, and so, in time, they began to see him as a madman.
The small, burnt sticks give a beautiful sense of what our life is and what our death is. Some lose their heads easily, others keep their full ashen heads and charred bodies. When joined with patience and calm, they form palisades, bridges, rafts between the realm of the living and the realm of the dead. They resemble poems written to last a miraculous instant and a forever tinged with sorrow. One must understand them.
In December, when the days fade earlier, just before Christmas, they found the old man dead at home. He lay stretched on the floor, inside a gigantic cage made of thousands and thousands of those enchanting fragments of burnt wood. It was a poor mausoleum.
Whether it sheltered him or held him captive, no one has ever managed to understand from what, or why.
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