Well I wasn't thinking of this replacing the write a story in a week thread
but acting in conjunction with it. It is after all a rather different concept
I was hoping more people might join in with this, as I thought it was easier to do. Even just writing a funny descriptive caption for the photo is very popular on other forums.
Great way to start! Loved the story and the witty lines.
Thanks
I read more Shakespeare yesterday than I have in years (and remembered why I don't particularly like him
BUT the concept appealed to me as the title is a pun on 'Now is the winter of our discontent, made summer by the sun of this Prince of York' .... so I wanted to incorporate other well (or perhaps lesser known) quotes from Shakespeare into the story. I have highlighted all the (mis)quotes below.
Now Is the Winter Of Our Discount Tent
(with apologies to the Bard)
Readers, friends, fellow survivalists, lend me your ears for I have
a winter's tale to tell.
For many years we had been discussing a 'return to nature' as a family, then the economic disaster struck and what had been a potential lifestyle choice became a harsh reality. Our house had been repossessed and here we were trying make a go of the survivalist way of life by necessity rather than ideology.
When in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes, misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows and none were stranger than our fellow survivalists, but this is not a tale about them, but about the winter of our discount tent.
"To have or not to have", that is the question that ran through my mind as I studied the pile of discount tents. I was probably making
much ado about nothing, as under the circumstances, a tent was essential.
The tempest had blown in from the nor'east unexpectedly.
Beware the Ides of March, for its winter storms are sharpest and this one was no exception. We had 3 tents set up, one for storage, one larger one for cooking, eating, reading etc and one smaller one (easier to keep warm with just body heat) for sleeping. The storm had swept in and the heavy fall of snow had crushed our storage tent under its weight. A new one was essential so here I was, perusing the pile of discounted tents, trying to find the best one i.e. the one that offered the most for the least. Finally I made my choice and worked my way through the crowd to the check out.
"
You pay a great deal too dear for what's given freely or at least cheaply over there," I said, to the man perusing the more expensive tents with their double flaps and inner lining. As expected he completely ignored me.
A short time later I arrived back at our campsite with the new discount tent and set about setting it up and moving our stores of food and other essentials into it. Once it was up my wife suggested that we needed to ceremonially welcome the new tent with a libation, by which she meant we needed a warming shot of Tequila after working in the cold for so long. Two or three shots later, or perhaps it was more, and I was taken with a moment of poetic fancy. Going over to the old tent I raised my glass and intoned, "
What 's gone and what 's past help should be past grief, so let us not mourn the passing of this tent." I turned to the new tent and poured out a tot on the ground before it and said, "
Then let not winter's ragged hand deface this abode, let it last long past winter's end. Let us not discount this discounted tent f
or having cost next to nothing, we have little to lose. We have heard the chimes of frost ringing in the breeze at midnight. Let us climb out of the jaws of death winter would set before us.
The miserable have no other medicine but only hope so let us hope that t
his winter of our discounted tent be made summer by hope.
A tent of few dollars is the best tent. Long may it last."
After this speech, the tent did indeed survive all the hazards of that winter, which forever after was known as the 'Winter of our Discount Tent' although my wife argues that it should be better known as the 'Winter of Tequila Prose with a side of Frozen Toes.'