They wake up at the hour when the world is still asleep. The last stretch of night before the morning greets them with silence as they open doors to the cool air outside. Through stillness a truck rolls, engine and wheels interrupting the morning calm as the headlights break through the dark.
They walk beneath the fading stars to the rough shelter and the sound of quiet voices. The night watch welcomes them from under their blankets, lighted by the dim glow of the fire. This fire is the reason they are here, the reason so many have set aside their work, their lives, to gather together before it. It must be guarded through the night, fed and carefully tended. For, even while it draws people in and warms them, it serves another, greater purpose. Behind the brick, in darkness sit the products of many hours of work, the work of their hands. Shelves, propped up by fire worn, stone stilts, are laden with vessels--object awaiting their transformation. The hands that formed them placed them gently into darkness, and now feed the fire that will make them beautiful.
As the sky fades to grey, quiet conversation is the theme music to the feeding of the flames. The fire burns brighter now as the watchers push it onward. All this is in preparation for the great dance of later. The time is coming when there will be little rest as the watchers turn from woodpile back to fire in a wild dance, feeding its great hunger. They will sweat from its heat as they fight to bring it to the point of transformation. Through another night they will work, all for the sake of the work of their hands. For, when the fire is done, when the heat has receded and the darkness has returned within, eager hands will remove the door of bricks and hands and eyes will explore the depths of the kiln to look for flashes of beauty left as a surprise by the fire.
"The artist is a servant who is willing to be a birthgiver. In a very real sense the artist should be like Mary who, when the angel told her that she was to bear the Messiah, was obedient to the command." -Madeline L'Engle, Walking on Water: Reflections on Faith and Art
4.20.2013
4.10.2013
made for you
There is something beautiful
about a cup that welcomes
its maker's hand
with every curve matching
as it is cradled there, safe.
It fits like the interlocked fingers
of a long-wed couple.
Comfortable, it says
I was made for you.
about a cup that welcomes
its maker's hand
with every curve matching
as it is cradled there, safe.
It fits like the interlocked fingers
of a long-wed couple.
Comfortable, it says
I was made for you.
4.04.2013
untitled
Rain dripping on my face
turned up, grey-skyward.
Dark skies send cold drops,
emissaries, to the world
of wet shoes, mud grass below.
Each drop caressing my face
whispers, Go back, go home.
There is no light here.
But I am tired of the glow
yellow and fake
of the light we have created
man made light
to carry us through grey days.
I want to see the truth
though the truth shows only dark today.
The skies weep with the dark,
mixing with the tears on my face.
I didn't know the truth would hurt,
would break a heart that wanted to see.
Tears dripping on my face
turned up, grey-skyward
blur my sight of the world before me.
It is dark all around, but I will stay
and wait for the first glow of light.
turned up, grey-skyward.
Dark skies send cold drops,
emissaries, to the world
of wet shoes, mud grass below.
Each drop caressing my face
whispers, Go back, go home.
There is no light here.
But I am tired of the glow
yellow and fake
of the light we have created
man made light
to carry us through grey days.
I want to see the truth
though the truth shows only dark today.
The skies weep with the dark,
mixing with the tears on my face.
I didn't know the truth would hurt,
would break a heart that wanted to see.
Tears dripping on my face
turned up, grey-skyward
blur my sight of the world before me.
It is dark all around, but I will stay
and wait for the first glow of light.
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