22 February 2010
Mama
and daddy
taught me reading,
and also my writing
when I was still little--
too little to be much good.
They didn't mind, but it took me
a couple of years to really like writing.
But reading I loved and adored and poured over
every book with beautiful pictures or (more particularly) beautiful poetry
which filled me up with such sing-song joy, it spilled over
and out my own pencil, between the blue lines of three-hole-punched paper.
And I discovered a new love for the scratch of my own thoughts
on the rough of cheap paper, the taste of my pencil between my teeth
as I carefully sampled the sounds to discover a one that could Mean more perfectly.
Luscious-- that is what language became. I pruned and weeded and watered and fertilized with metaphors.
Sometimes I mourned to waste such care on describing the transfer of valence electrons in ionic bonds,
but afterward, in the evenings, I filled up notebooks with my thoughts on love and happiness, sunshine and
warm rain. And sometimes, sometimes, I set down my clicky-pen, closed my moleskine and just loved my own life.
But what, I always ask then, is the good of basking in real life, if you never capture it with
pen and paper? And then I pick up my old, worn composition book and find some place cozy from which to
paint the view in the window of my words.
2 comments:
Very lovely, Mallory! Good luck to you on your mission!!!
I miss you.
I love this post, I don't know how many times I've read it.
Do you remember one day when we were in England many years ago in an unforgettably beautiful place? It was a cathedral with celestial music and a good spirit. It was so sweet that when I sat down, I drew some beautiful things so that I could remember how it looked. It was really beautiful drawing, for the inspiration was so clear.
You sat down after looking at me and composed poetry. Also beautiful for the inspiration. This memory brings smiles. Keep writing, Mal!
Post a Comment