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A Fable
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Once upon a time,
in a town that loved clocks, in the heart of a country that loved clocks, there lived two
men who loved being clock makers. Jon Grueschen was famous. His spectacular
clocks gleamed like jewels in clock towers, large and small, for two hundred miles around.
Mayors and governors and the King himself commissioned them, and the
unveiling of every new one was marked by a festival where crowds gathered and speeches
were made and Jon Grueschen himself set in motion the great swinging pendulum and polished
gears that in turn set in motion the huge hands and the life-sized, hand-carved animated
figures, and the great bells that from that moment would mark each hour for everyone
within reach of their bold cry. The name of Jon Grueschen brought a special pride,
and every town aspired to have one of the master's great works for its own.
Few knew the name of Reinhardt Usher, though his watches ticked quietly in the vest
pockets of gentlemen and on the dainty neck chains of ladies and in the aprons of
shopkeepers and laborers across the land. A dozen hundred times a day school
teachers and bankers and police officers and ship captains glanced at his little
masterpieces as they hurried through their busy lives. Politicians and businessman
and young scholars were on time for their appointments because someone in each of their
lives a parent, a lover, a friend had given them as a remembrance one of
Reinhardt Usher's unsigned little machines. The Queen, it is said, wore one on a
pearl necklace that was always on her breast and consulted it at the beginning and the end
of every meeting of her minsters.
It is noon where I sit. Through my open window I hear the throaty bells of Jon
Grueschen's nearest clock, in the tower in the valley. In reflex I pluck from my
pocket one of Reinhardt Usher's little marvels. There is no more than a few seconds
difference between the times they keep.
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