PART ONE
Interrupted Conversation
(1)
CREDO
|
A life filled to the brim
with contradictions –
they drive me this way and that way
along a narrow, steep path.
The path uncertain,
and I am blind –
this path no path,
but a crack in the world |
I live in a little house on a hill at the edge of a small town.
Down below me in the valley lies the town proper, from all sides of which
the land rises upward into a series of low, rounded peaks. These are
the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, smoothed by weather and time into
a softly undulating terrain. Viewed from a distance, these hills
appear to be thickly covered with trees; this gives them the illusion of
being but sparsely inhabited. Seen up close, however, this seemingly
uncharted land is revealed to be interlaced with blacktop highways and
dusty country roads, or sectioned off by streets between which lie rows
of closely packed houses. Although there are a good many trees, even
a few small woods to be found, this is no wilderness against which humans
must struggle in order to secure their existence. That battle was
won a long time ago. Rather, this is nature conquered and tamed,
cultivated and groomed so as to provide the most complimentary background
possible for the descendants of those earlier combatants whose memory may
be forgotten, but whose urge to command and order the uncivilized character
of the world about them lives on. It is, or it has always seemed to
me, a curiously strange mutation of forces that has wrought into being,
from the stock of the natural world, this intricately networked hodgepodge
of houses and stores, factories and farms, sewage systems and gas pipes,
electrical currents running through wires, cement sidewalks and tar-covered
roads. I look out on it all from the vantage point of my house
on the hill with a sometimes puzzled, and frequently doubtful, eye.
The cemetery for the town down below is located up on top of this
hill. Through a small stand of trees and down a short dirt road,
it lies no more than a few minute's walk from my house. I go
there often. To some this might seem a strange, even a morbid
habit to indulge, but I find that the cemetery makes a good place for
thinking. Wandering through its tranquil domains seems to
help facilitate a more tranquil wandering through my own mind.
Although I'm not particularly given to brooding on death, I must
admit that I find the presence of those who have passed beyond to be
peculiarly comforting. They give me a sense of continuity, I suppose;
even of hope: they who lie so peacefully under the ground have, after
all, been through something much worse than anything I've ever faced.
Of course, they didn't survive what they've been through –
but still. I find that their presence helps me to keep things
in perspective.
The cemetery is soothing in other ways as well, acting as a sort of
balm to the senses, it being so quiet and old and also quite beautiful
in its own rustic sort of way. Evidently a good deal of thought was
put into the planting of the trees and shrubbery, for there is always a
freshness of size and shape to greet the eye. Of color too, for
in springtime the rhododendrons, of which there are many, put out great
masses of flowers of red, purple, pink, and white, and then they look
as fantastical as giant party balloons or huge, old-fashioned ballroom
gowns. In autumn the leaves of the many trees – maple and oak,
elm, birch and ash, their branches flung up against the sky –
turn luminous as fire; and of course all through the summer there are
flowers of many different kinds blooming on the graves. Even the
gravestones are surprising for their variety. Those who were
rich in life have erected huge granite slabs, towering obelisks, and
somber religious statues to mark where they lie in death; these strike
me as being wonderfully absurd, both pretentious and humbling at once.
One part of the cemetery, the oldest part, has several long rows of tall
and very thin, flat stones stuck close together and jutting out of the mossy
ground at every odd angle. Some are engraved with quaint lines of
old-fashioned verse, such as the following:
|
Always be ready, no time delay;
I in my prime was called away;
Great grief to those that's left behind,
Hoping in time great joy to find. |
Another section is filled with row and row of very small stones;
these stand as mute testimony to those whose lives lasted only a few years,
or a few hours, in this world.
It sometimes surprises me, when I go to walk there, how many other people
I find roaming about the cemetery. "What are you doing
here?" I want to ask them. "Haven't you anyplace
better to go?" As for me, the answer to that question is
no. The dead, I find, are exactly the right company for
me: all I really want is to be left alone. Of course,
some of the people I see are visiting the graves of relatives –
but others treat the area as a sort of park. They go there to
walk their dogs, themselves, or each other, strolling about for the
pleasure of exercise it may be, or perhaps for the exercising of pleasure.
Sometimes kids can be seen riding their bicycles along the narrow winding
roads, or heard whooping and hollering through the woods, for running
along one side of the cemetery there is a deep ravine with a creek at
the bottom, and a fairly large strip of woods beyond – large
enough to provide home to a small herd of deer and a flock of wild turkeys;
also to chipmunks and squirrels and to birds of course in countless
numbers. I've seen groundhogs there too, and the shy opossum; once
I even saw a giant turtle who had dragged herself up to the top of the
ravine for the purpose of scooping out a nest for her eggs.
Here, right against the edge of this wood, the ravine dropping down below
me on one side and the cemetery spanning out beside me on the other, is
where I like best to go walking. It's a quiet, soothing place
– but, what with the untrimmed weeds growing there, also just
a little unruly. I remember how, one autumn several years ago,
I'd thought of making this little pathway of mine even more enjoyable
by buying several packets of wildflower seeds and scattering them along
the way. I'd first got the idea in the spring when I'd spotted a
clump of daffodils growing in amongst the weeds, presumably the
result of someone having cast some extra bulbs aside after planting
what they needed on a grave. I thought of what a pleasure it
would be to see flowers blooming here and there unexpectedly all along
the edge of the ravine, and of how other people might enjoy them as well,
viewing their appearance with a kind of surprised wonder. I even
went so far as to think that they might be inspired, during their hour of
need, to a greater degree of confidence in the cycles of the natural world,
of which death is but another part. But whether because the autumn
leaves were so thick the seeds never reached the soil, or because the
weeds coming up next spring were so plentiful that they crowded out all
other growth, none of the seeds I'd scattered ever grew.
|