Grief can lull us into a stasis, a frozen silence, when confronted with the enormity of loss. It is an almost-impossible effort to enunciate its effects – to verbalize how specifically it fills the void of what was sundered. In his essay “The Poet,” Ralph W. Emerson writes that the quality of the imagination is to flow and not to freeze. To metamorphize grief into elegy, to revolutionize loss into value, is to know how to navigate tenderly, with respectful care, these icy floats upon which we need to sit for a while before we can even think of being lured back to the shore – where, as Elizabeth Bishop writes – “love will unexpectedly appear over & over again.”
Tuesday, March 6, 2007
visitations and progressions: bloomington, indiana lake lemon
Grief can lull us into a stasis, a frozen silence, when confronted with the enormity of loss. It is an almost-impossible effort to enunciate its effects – to verbalize how specifically it fills the void of what was sundered. In his essay “The Poet,” Ralph W. Emerson writes that the quality of the imagination is to flow and not to freeze. To metamorphize grief into elegy, to revolutionize loss into value, is to know how to navigate tenderly, with respectful care, these icy floats upon which we need to sit for a while before we can even think of being lured back to the shore – where, as Elizabeth Bishop writes – “love will unexpectedly appear over & over again.”
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4 comments:
beautiful analogy.
travel safely.
let's go back again in summer surrounded by the full of green!
here's to flowing, not freezing (while taking the silent, inward, intaken breath moment on the ice flow), and the value-creating of loss, with all the action it requires. i love the forward motion of all of this - the one that takes us along, to the future, and the one that we create. so beautiful chantie - i ache, and am enlightened.
People should read this.
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