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Four Walls * * * * *
I. Story "First bits and crumbs of the piece come and gradually join together in my mind; then the soul getting warmed to the work, the thing grows more and more, and I spread it out broader and clearer, and at last it gets almost finished in my head, even when it is a long piece, so that I can see the whole of it at a single glance in my mind, as if it were a beautiful painting or a handsome human being; in which way I do not hear it in my imagination at all as a succession -- the way it must come later -- but all at once as it were. It is a rare feast. All the inventing and making goes on in me as in a beautiful strong dream. But the best of all is the hearing of it all at once." --Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart * * * * * The Story To tell the story. That was the reason for being there, so the reporter said. If that is legacy it is because it is given away. In the end what we leave behind is our story, the heart of the matter, the heart given away. * * * * *
Richard * * * * * Wilson She is standing at the doorway of the old white church, with her cane between the pillars. It is dusk, the shadows long and we cannot see which way her head is turned, what comes or goes is lost in the silhouette. So much life has made the journey between this nave and altar, the rug is worn with turns of time. This is the house of obelisks, totems, cross, that mark the date and mile. We are talking in the breezeway on a summer morning after mass she sits on a cold gray slab of bench, I am squatting low so she can hear. She wants to know about the new church we may build, she who saw the dream, and I so want to tell. I say we set a goal, a challenge to the artist whose work must wean the people onward as a magnet from tomorrow, so the old white church is left behind. With an arch of eye and brow she says a broken "no", we can never leave these walls behind-- too much of her life was written here-- baptism, confirmation, wedding, eulogy. These are the defining markers, as clear as the corner stones upon which these clapboard walls are set. In the spirit of a breezeway, at the end of a story, in silence we rise and go on to the beginning. * * * * * "I see, hear, and know simultaneously, and learn what I know as if in a moment." --Hildegard of Bingen At once |
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Document last modified on: 06/22/2004