Walls or Bridges?

I used to tell a story in my days working in libraries with kids, and its been on my mind lately. I know reading is not the same as hearing, but do your best to hear it being told…

Once upon a time there were two neighbors who were also farmers and friends. They’d been all three for almost forty years. Trading stories, tools, helping each other put up hay–all the things that farmers, neighbors, and friends do for each other.

And then one day they had a falling out. Oh, it was over something stupid, like Paul lost Joe’s favorite hay rake; or Joe called Paul a name in jest and Paul took it wrong. What they argued about doesn’t really matter because the next day Paul took his tractor and dug a big ditch between the two men’s properties. Water from the top of the hill searched out the ditch and now a decent-sized creek was the boundary line between the two farms, when before, there had been none.

There was a terrible silence between the two men for weeks.

One day Joe looked up from working in the barn to see a man standing in the doorway. He was carrying a wooden tool box that was well filled with awls, rasps, screws, and nails. He had two saws in a pack on his back. “G’mornin,” he said with an easy smile. “Got any projects you need done or things you might need fixin’?”

Joe thought a bit and then smiled back. “You’ve come at a good time. Follow me.” Joe led the carpenter down to the rushing stream. “Ya see this crick? T’wasn’t here three weeks ago. My neighbor put it in to spite me, and I’m mighty mad about the whole thing. I want you to build me a nice wall with that pile a lumber I have in the barn. And I’ll pay ya well if ya do a good job.”

The carpenter nodded. “I have just the project in mind for you. I think you’ll be pleased.”

“I have to go to town today,” Joe told the carpenter. “I can get ya more wood if you think you’ll need some.”

“I think this will be plenty,” the carpenter told him. He took his saws from his sack, spread his tools on the ground, and hurried off to haul the lumber he needed to get to work.

When Joe returned from town late in the afternoon, his jaw dropped at the sight. There across the creek was a graceful wooden bridge with sturdy railings and a deck big enough to support a tractor or a truck or a wagon. And there on the other side of the bridge was his neighbor Paul waving and smiling. He crossed the bridge and grabbed Joe’s hand, shaking it up and down with abandon. “I have to say I don’t know what possessed you to have this bridge built after these last weeks of ugliness between us, but I am so glad you did. I’ve wondered and wondered how we could ever make a bridge over what happened, and dog gone it, you went and done it. Built a bridge right over it.” He shook his head in amazement.

Joe was stunned into silence, but he had a grin smeared all over his face. “T’wasn’t me,” he finally stuttered to his friend. “It was this here carpenter gent’s work.”

They turned to look at the carpenter who was packing up his tools. Joe called to him, “Please don’t go. I got several other projects for ya — you did a fine job on this one.”

The carpenter shook his head and smiled.  He shouldered his saws, picked up his tool box, and waved at the two friends. “I can’t stay,” he told them. “I’ve got other bridges to build.” And with those last words he disappeared over the hill.

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We live in a world that builds walls, but bridge building can be done by anyone–you don’t have to be a carpenter or an engineer. What kind of bridge can you build? A footbridge? A covered bridge? Or a glorious bridge that overcomes fear and unforgiveness? Imitate the carpenter–love your neighbor and build a bridge, not a wall.

This story has been around for a long time, mostly as Author Unknown. I found it as “Old Joe and the Carpenter” in Thirty-Three Multicultural Tales to Tell by Pleasant DeSpain. Margaret Read MacDonald published a version by the same name in Peace Tales. When I searched the internet I found an original version–much longer and more colorful–as a story On the Hills and Everywhere written by Manly Wade Wellman (ca. 1956) in a book of stories called John the Balladeer.  This is my own version. 

14 thoughts on “Walls or Bridges?

    • It’s interesting. The story I always told just called him the carpenter (though it’s easy enough to deduce who he might be). The longer “original” 1952 version calls him Jesus. I actually like the carpenter versions better—it’s easier to identify with “anyone can be a peacemaker.”

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  1. I enjoyed it! It reminded me of a song I used to listen to when I was little. A group called Harmony sang it but the original was by someone else.

    There are bridges, bridges in the sky,
    They are shining in the sun,
    They are stone and steel and wood and wire,
    They can change two things to one.

    They are languages and letters,
    They are poetry and awe,
    They are love and understanding,
    And they’re better than a wall.

    They are languages and letters,
    They are poetry and awe,
    They are love and understanding,
    And they’re better than a wall.

    There are canyons, there are canyons,
    They are yawning in the night,
    They are rank and bitter anger,
    And they are all devoid of light.

    They are fear and blind suspicion,
    They are apathy and pride,
    They are dark and so foreboding,
    And they’re oh, so very wide.

    They are fear and blind suspicion,
    They are apathy and pride,
    They are dark and so foreboding,
    And they’re oh, so very wide.

    Let us build a bridge of music,
    Let us cross it with a song,
    Let us span another canyon,
    Let us right another wrong.

    Oh, and if someone should ask us,
    Where we’re off and bound today,
    We will tell them, “Building Bridges”,
    And be off and on our way.

    Oh, and if someone should ask us,
    Where we’re off and bound today,
    We will tell them, “Building Bridges”,
    And be off and on our way.

    We will tell them, “Building Bridges”,
    And be off and on our way.

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  2. I’ve just recently found your blog as I’ve just recently retired and was looking around for other bloggers reflecting on this stage of life. I’m happy to have stumbled on yours and have been back reading a few but can’t comment on them as the comment section is closed.
    I hope that you continue writing as writing suits you and seems to be an activity that you enjoy. You’ve got a lovely way of painting a picture of painting a chair! Or all your other activities. Look at the vast number of followers you have who enjoy those words. I’ll be back to back read more old posts although it is disappointing that I can’t comment on those specific posts.
    Take care. Thanks for putting “pen to paper”

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    • Thanks for writing such a lovely comment! I found out early on that spammers are the ones who comment most often on older posts. So once I closed them I was rarely bothered. And I do like to keep my little home on the internet tidy. (Probably more so than the real house!😀)
      I had plans of posting twice a month once I retired, but you see where that has gone!
      Thank you for the encouragement.

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  3. Pingback: Walls or Bridges? — the circle of life | Robby Robin's Journey

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