There is something about dining on ashes that comforts me. Is it
nostalgia for something I never knew? Is it solipsism or self pity? Is
it just easier to romanticize what we don’t know and never experienced
and create an image only, an interpretation whose personal experience
makes the unknown seem more real? This is what impressionistic painters
must feel—caught between an inner and outer world and unable to
completely express the place in between where we live in fear and hope. I
remember walking railroad tracks as a boy, balancing on one rail, the
sharp rock between timbers, the faint sound of an invisible train coming
fast from behind; this is what it’s like walking a corn field where
prairie once was, and where it could be again.
Monday, January 4, 2016
The Closest I've Come to Prairie
Maybe the closest I’ve come to prairie is flying over the Plains, a
field of clouds beneath, dark blue above, or on the mossy Irish coast
looking west toward Iceland. I feel a gunshot hole in my chest, see its
shadow on the ground in front of me, feel the air chill my insides, know
I’m not just incomplete but desperate—absolutely desperate—to plug the
absence. I think about tearing up my small front lawn, seeding with
buffalo grass, placing clumps of little bluestem here and there like hiccups. But I don’t have the guts or the faith.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment