Sunday, November 28, 2010

We Who Might Be Beautiful Together...

I took a walk to visit Poem Tree. The wind was blowing ribbons and poem cards this way and that. I leaned Spirit Stick against the bench and untangled some of the ribbons from the branches. They love to dance in the wind. They love to dance so much they forget themselves & get tied in knots. I know how that feels.

A woman came by and noticed Spirit Stick. This is beautiful, she said, where did you get it? On the street, I said. A piece here, a piece there. And things people give me.

Oh, you made it! she said. (this happens more than you might imagine... as though one could find this in a store)

It is beautiful. I think so too.

The things it's made of don't seem like much by themselves. A bit of colored ribbon, packing tape, aluminum can tabs, plastic rings... most of them found on the street. Things people have dropped, tossed aside. I pick them up from the sidewalk, from muddy puddles by the curb, on parking lots. I see something... a bit of color, something that shines in the sun, and I think -- oh, this will be nice to add to Spirit Stick. I'll find a place for it, and it will become part of Spirit Stick.

Like a line in a poem

Most of them, not much in themselves, a few stand out. Like the bit of a bracelet I found on the subway platform. If you look for it, you can single it out. Oh, this is pretty--where did you find it?

But the pretty things are no more or less important than the aluminum tabs I took from cans in the trash, or bits of string from a muddy puddle. A pigeon feather. They all come together, become something else, something more. & yet are no less what they are in themselves.

Like the words of a poem

I think the best poems... the poems I love, are like that. Made of things others have tossed aside. Thought useless.

Useless.

But in just this resides their beauty--which has no use we can readily assign. A poet, an artist... sees this lost, abandoned thing... 'you are like me, he thinks, and I am like you ... and she loves it for what it is, and gives it a home. With other homeless things.

A Spirit Stick.

A Poem Tree.

A poem.

And they rejoice and dance in wind or rain. In the mind of someone passing by. We are beautiful together! they say...

... and they are... and so might we all, be beautiful together. Lost things waiting to be found







1 comment:

  1. I simply assembled my favorite objet trouvé by laying two lost souls one atop another: a fallen cherubim mated with a subterranean conduit of shit.

    A small, irregular slab of a decrepit, recently collapsed, New Orleans brick wall, a wall which once separated a disreputable juke joint from a formerly respectable Uptown shotgun home, was gently laid atop a deeply mottled, recently resurfaced, section of antique terracotta sewer pipe. Broken, useless things to all but me, then renting the former corner bar and just this side of homelessness myself.

    I admired my found objects individually and adored them married, with the earthy, multicolored patina of the pipe supporting the failed wall, the weathered mortar between the eroded bricks, the wall inexplicably holding together and still serving horizontally when it could no longer separate the sacred from the profane vertically, the sewer pipe aimed to the heavens.

    I enjoyed my care taking, coffee drinking time with them in New Orleans for many years. I've never seen a more beautiful coffee table.

    They are separated and lost again, waiting in all of their individual reality to be rediscovered by someone and given a new home, new meanings ...

    -- Paul

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