Monday Morning Musings:
“’I am half sick of shadows,’ said
The Lady of Shalott”
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “The Lady of Shalott”
“We’re neither pure, nor wise, nor good
We’ll do the best we know,
We’ll build our house and chop our wood
And make our garden grow. . .
And our garden grow.”
From Leonard Bernstein, “Make Our Garden Grow,” Candide
All week the sun plays hide and seek
perhaps preparing for the eclipse
my soul also wanders
in and out of shadows
I think about life
blooming in the late summer plants about me
at a make-your-own-terrarium night,
we each make one,
the open kind—succulents–
though the closed kind would be more interesting to me–
and less so to the cats–
I think,
as we drink wine
and visit with our friends’ daughter who had also showed up
(Surprise!)
I wonder how long our plants will live,
we, who are good at bringing up children and cats,
are not so adept at raising plants,
though the weeds seem to thrive,
still we put them in the sun
(but where there is sun, there are shadows)
and try to make our garden grow
As the sun plays in the August sky,
we go to the movies
(shadows turn to light and life upon a screen)
the film is about life and death
and making choices
telling the truth
confronting traditions
rejecting what does not work for you
embracing differences
seeing people as people,
not as members of different groups,
it’s kind of a comedy
and a romance
the comedy of life
the tragedies
funny family dinners
love
and a coma,
existence in a shadow world,
while life goes on about you
Afterwards, we sit upstairs
in an open-air part of a restaurant
flowers planted, blooming in boxes outside the railing
and street performers serenade us from below
it’s noisy,
but, hey, summer in the city
a beautiful evening
we watch buses and tourists below us
and pedicycle drinking groups,
laughing and singing
we eat tater tots and pizza
because it’s that kind of night
summertime
and we’re not at war yet,
we walk around
just a bit
because there’s work to be done
and an early day tomorrow
the shadows deepen
The sun dances through clouds
casting shadows large and small
on the eighth, Barbara Cook and Glen Campbell both die
glorious soprano and beautiful tenor
perhaps they sing duets in some other world
(do gardens grow there?)
the next day is the anniversary of my father’s birth
he would have been ninety-eight this week
and I think of my mother,
who will soon turn ninety-five
the seasons turning, sun and shadows
The sun comes and goes
hiding
seeking
gone for a woman in Charlottesville
gone for her family
gone for people killed in mosques and churches
gone for women taken as spoils of war
call evil by its name
the darkness of the soul
never brightened by the sun
hidden beneath shadows
I watch the sun rise and set
watch the shadows lengthen
as summer turns to fall
I hold on
seeking light
giving it to the terrarium plants
because they are still holding on, too
despite all odds
we’ve made our gardens grow
I wrote about my father here.
We went to Plant Nite at Auburn Road Vineyards.
We saw The Big Sick, official trailer here. We ate at Revolution House.
You can hear Barbara Cook in “Make Our Garden Grow” the original Broadway cast recording of Candide.