Monday, March 4, 2013
7:00pm
28˚F
"Or will the first night be the only night, / a darkness for which we have no other name?"
In the dark nonhuman
death happens and we have no proof of it. The trees fall and sway, their husked
bodies severing from their emerald birth body. The sky shatters, a window in
the cold, all her blue spraying into the smallest shards of glass until only light
can mend the pieces back into her. Light weeps into dark, running away and
hiding in his holes, in the dark’s black creases. Yes we can hear them; we can hear
the natural breaking and bowing—the cries of the trees, the sky, the light. The
wind picks up their echoes for us. But we cannot see them; we cannot decipher
the exact moment they are taken by the temporary death. We can see the light
crawling away into the holes, but we can never catch her in her final act of tucking
herself away from the world.
Death is the
wrong word for this natural leaving, for this light to dark kind of severing
and I am aware of that. Death implies endlessness, but there is no end when
light leaves, but only the beginning of dark and then again the beginning of
light. “This is where language…stop[s]," where humanity has no words for
natural phenomena. Yes we have the scientific, but the natural world wants
nothing of theory. The natural world craves for a voice outside of the human,
for a voice that can travel beyond sound into actual oral articulation, for a
natural voice that can claim its death, its leaving. I wonder if this is
possible? Can nature sing? Can we allow it?
Just as we
cannot catch the nonhuman entering their temporary dark, we cannot catch the
human arriving at their permanent dying. We think we can know the exact moment
death is coming. Doctors offer us our chances, give us months as we hope for
years, but it has nothing to do with time. It has everything to do with the
moment, the moment we cannot control, the dying moment. So many souls at this
cemetery did not see that moment coming. My uncle didn’t. He was on the phone
with his niece and then he wasn’t. His heart stopped, gave out, walked
off and no one saw it coming.
"How feeble our vocabulary in the face of death,
How impossible to write it down."
At dusk, I
arrive at the cemetery to locked gates. The light is leaving me. The dark will
not let me in and I respect that. I stand here and stare through his dim body,
searching for an end, waiting for my eyes to hit into a kind of spine or bone,
but nothing happens. My stare just travels deeper and deeper into him. It moves
through the pines that are hardly visible. I can barely make out their
stoutness or the way their bodies are marked with the scars that tell their
life stories. I reach over the gate and touch the chest of one of the pines to
make sure I am not seeing things, to make sure there is a real body standing
firm in front of me. The bark is cold and rough and touching its riveted skin makes
me that much more human, that much more alive and able to feel through the dark.
This cemetery
rises with the sun and falls asleep to the dusk and its human visitors are told
to follow the same cycle, but I am breaking it by being here. I wonder what I
would do if I were to get caught, if a human would see me in front of this
gate. How would I explain myself? Would I say, I am trying to capture death or the moment right before? No not human
death, no not death at all really, but more the natural leaving of things.
"This is where language will stop"
____________________________________________________________
Sifting Through the
Dark--Blog Entry #6 Inspired By:
“The First Night”
By Billy Collins
The worst thing about death must
be
the first
night.
—Juan
Ramón Jiménez
Before I opened you,
Jiménez,
it never occurred to me
that day and night
would continue to circle
each other in the ring of death,
but now you have me
wondering
if there will also be a
sun and a moon
and will the dead gather
to watch them rise and set
then repair, each soul
alone,
to some ghastly equivalent
of a bed.
Or will the first night be
the only night,
a darkness for which we
have no other name?
How feeble our vocabulary
in the face of death,
How impossible to write it
down.
This is where language
will stop,
the horse we have ridden
all our lives
rearing up at the edge of
a dizzying cliff.
The word that was in the
beginning
and the word that was made
flesh—
those and all the other
words will cease.
Even now, reading you on
this trellised porch,
how can I describe a sun
that will shine after death?
But it is enough to
frighten me
into paying more attention
to the world’s day-moon,
to sunlight bright on
water
or fragmented in a grove
of trees,
and to look more closely
here at these small leaves,
these sentinel thorns,
whose employment it is to
guard the rose.
Those images, the description of you reaching for something, is very powerful. That seems to embody the heart and soul (to borrow from your previous entries reflections) of this project.
ReplyDeleteMarguerite,
ReplyDeleteThis post is very engaging and powerful. You use the idea of death and the dark and question why we use them in our language when this is such a natural process. "So many souls at this cemetery did not see that moment coming. My uncle didn’t. He was on the phone with his niece and then he wasn’t. His heart stopped, gave out, walked off and no one saw it coming." I like that you tie a personal moment with your place. I also enjoyed the moment where you touch the tree to make sure that moment was real. It added more sensory details than just your sight. I have to say that you are really brave for seeking out your place at night and I think you did a lovely job giving us a real sense of your place at a different time of the day.
-Erin