Monday, April 26, 2010

Lilac in the rain


 
The humid air was heavy with the scent of lilacs yesterday.  We've had a steady, gentle rain for days now, and it seems as if the lilacs were waiting for the water so they could bloom.  They were so beautiful out there in the twilight with each blossom a mix of colors, and they smelled so sweet and fresh that I stayed near until it was dark. 

A couple of years ago, I pruned them.  The wood is very hard, with the sapwood (around the outside) a creamy color and the heartwood (in the center) a darker red-brown color.  In olden times, lilac branches were hollowed out to make reed pipes and flutes.  

I thought of the music those instruments might make: haunting tunes of lost love, or sprightly dances for young lovers?  I remembered that lilacs bloom on old wood, like love that cycles back to courtship in a long relationship.  It's no wonder that lilacs are a symbol for love.

There is a Greek myth about the Syrinx, a nymph known for her chastity.  She was pursued by Pan, and was transformed into hollow river reeds so she could escape him.  In response, he cut the reeds and made the first set of pan pipes, which were known as "syrinx."  The genus name for lilacs is Syringa (probably because the stems are easily hollowed for use as musical instruments.)

Sometimes these ideas float through my head while I'm out there, experiencing, and I just don't know what to do with it all.  I only know that it's beautiful and worth saving somehow, so I put it here.  It was so wonderful, the deep blue of the sky, the wet spring green, and those heavenly lilacs, vibrating with color and aroma.

I think I'm going to make a bouquet for someone I don't like, and give it to them.  There's just too much beauty and love in the world to keep it all to ourselves.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Look!


Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything much better.
                                                                                                       --Albert Einstein

Such a wise man, and yet so human! While most of his work was based on math, Einstein had much of the artist about him.  His work was creative; in fact, some of his most famous work was done by "thought experiment."  His son, Hans Albert Einstein, was quoted in Einstein: A Centenary Volume about his father, " . . .he had a character more like that of an artist than of a scientist as we usually think of them.  For instance, the highest praise for a good theory or a good piece of work was not that it was correct nor that it was exact but that it was beautiful."

We say that "beauty is in the eye of the beholder," but I would respectfully amend that to "beauty is in the attention of the beholder."  Sometimes it take a while to really see something.  We humans literally can't see what's in front of our eyes without taking some time and directing our attention to something for just a little bit longer than we usually allow.

Suddenly, details spring to life.  We see the vein patterns in a dragonfly's wing, or the furry texture of a leaf, or the true expression in someone's eyes.  Sometimes that closer look is obtained through the lens of a camera, and sometimes it becomes visible because of an unusual perspective. But Einstein was right; understanding is right before our eyes.

On Experience

I stepped from plank to plank
  So slow and cautiously;
The stars about my head I felt,
  About my feet the sea.

I knew not but the next
  Would be my final inch--
This gave me that precarious gait
  Some call experience.
                             --Emily Dickenson