Yesod b'Malchut
by Maggid David Arfa
Yesod- creative, procreative, desire, flow, foundation,
fertility, Joseph and tzaddik
When Gary Snyder, the great poet and essayist was a teenager
in the mid 1940’s, he wanted to read the sexiest book around. He went to the
library and held his breath as he asked for Lady Chatterly’s Lover, by DH
Lawrence. The librarian paused for a second, and then reached for the key to
open the glass doors behind her. She pulled out the book and handed it to him.
He grabbed it, left the library as fast as he could without running, and went
to a private place to look into this book. To his amazement, upon opening this
book he found warm breezes, fragrant flowers, strong trees, rocks in cool
water...Craving sexual images, he found beautiful and sensual land images
interconnected with beautiful sensuality.
Do you think this is why the Song of Songs is filled with
luscious imagery from the natural world- aromas, mares, stags, gazelles,
fruiting fruit trees, soft shade, vineyards, pastures and all the rest? After
all, Rabbi Akiva did say that if all of Tanach (Torah, prophets and writings)
were the Holy Temple , the Song of Songs would be the
Holy of Holies. What might this Eros mean for us? It can so easily take us into
divorce or leading secret lives, or make us crazy and embittered from neglect.
How do we learn to raise the holy power of our desire?
Let’s slow down here. I don’t want to shatter this blog,
with the intensity of writing about something so big in a space so small. I can
see how it can easily happen. Our focus is how we might expand our sense of
sacred desire to include the land. That’s all. DH Lawrence wrote this inspiring
and often quoted line back in 1929: “Oh, what a catastrophe, what a maiming of
love when it was made personal, merely personal feeling. This is what is the
matter with us: we are bleeding at the roots because we are cut off from the
earth and sun and stars. Love has become a grinning mockery because, poor
blossom, we plucked it from its stem on the Tree of Life and expected it to
keep on blooming in our civilized vase on the table.”
Beautiful, eh? But how do we expand our imagination to
encompass the entire world and cosmos? I don’t think it will be as hard as you
think. Try this. Leave your home and wander the land until you find the
entryway that descends into a cavern. Note the cool moist air, enjoy the echo.
Follow the labyrinth cave passages until you reach the cave mouth that drops
you into a grotto. Sit on the lip of the cave’s mouth and just enjoy the warm
sunshine, green plants and the peaceful calm of the dragonflies. Remember that
ours is the only world that we know of that has sites such as these. Utter the
words, Tov M’od- Very Good.
Now take a deep breath and dive into the water and swim to
the river where the waters are calm and wide, shallow and warm, allowing you to
float and be supported without worry. This river, which flows from Eden is available to us
at all times, ready to infuse our desires with the waters of life.
Ready to go deeper? Let the living power of letters and
language grow in your imagination and become part of you. These common words
are from the newish dictionary, Home Ground: Language for an American
Landscape, by Barry Lopez. This great writer and adventurer has gathered
dozens of poets and novelists to create a geographical dictionary of uncommon
power. Lopez says at first the geographers on the project rejected the idea for
this book. "There are already lots of geography dictionaries", they
said. And then they read the first definitions coming in. Here are a few that
will help us remember that our home ground is sacred land; and help us journey
into the River that is always flowing from Eden .
CAVERN: A cavern is a large chamber within a cave, a
subterranean hollow- some with astonishing dimensions. The word cavernous
implies a place where body and psyche can be lost, a sanctuary where
philosophical speculation, a la Plato, can blossom. The words cavern and
chamber are sometimes used interchangeably with cave, but the cave is labyrinthine,
a maze of subterranean chambers, galleries, and passage-ways, while the cavern
is the biggest room of them all. Mark Twain described the discovery of such a
space in the Adventures of Tom Sawyer: "Tom went first, cutting rude steps
in the clay hill as he descended. Huck followed. Four avenues opened out to the
cavern which the great rock stood in." Carlsbad Caverns National
Park contains more than 100 limestone caves,
outstanding in the profusion, diversity, and beauty of their formations. The
details of caverns - drip-stone features such as stalactites and drapery- are
fragile environments affected by human activities and natural process both
above and below ground. Gretel Ehrlich
CAVE: A cave mouth is a door to mystery and beauty, the
entryway to a mineral world of water and moving air that, over time, has become
a sacred place. A womb of Earth. Many cave walls were once painted with animals
and the history of different peoples. In far deeper caves, Earth has painted
its own history. Some caves developed during the life-nourishing eruptions of
the planet: lava tubes, where magma runs underground and leaves empty tunnels
behind. Some are tectonic, created by quaking movements of the planet. And
there are long-lived caves of ice. The caves most widely known in the United States ,
however, are those created by dissolution and erosion in karst landscapes.
"The finest workers in stone are not copper and steel tools," wrote
Henry David Thoreau, "but the gentle touches of air and water working at
their leisure with a liberal allowance of time." Karst caves include
passageways and rooms with mineral deposits in the form of stalactites and
stalagmites, soda straws and draperylike ribbons, all built up by trickles of
calcite-bearing water. Patricia Hampl describes this water in Romantic
Education as "running steadily, timelessly, making its slow, hypnotic
mark on the stone, on the ear, on the brain." Caves have their own
ecosystems and many animals and insects depend on them. Not just hibernating
bears but resident blind crayfish and endangered cave fish. Many caves harbor
bats and indigenous beetles and salamanders. Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico shelters
crystal formations in cathedral like rooms. The stable temperature in caves
near San Antonio
preserves bat guano, once used to make gunpowder. Mammoth
Cave in Kentucky is the world's longest cave system,
with 350 miles of chambers and passages. Linda Hogan.
Note: every handful of entries have a quote from a novel or
poem on the side in italics. Here's the text next to CAVE: Standing against a sheer face of red rock one thousand
feet high; kneeling in a cave dwelling two thousand years old; watching as a
million bats stream from the mouth of Carlsbad Caverns into the purple dusk-
these nowheres and notimes are the only home we have. Kathryn Harrison, The
Kiss.
GROTTO: A small cavern scooped in a cave wall, usually by
erosion, is called a grotto. The term vaguely suggests protection, shelter, or
sustenance. As a river term, grotto usually refers to a small, shaded hollow a
the foot of a cliff that, most often, leads back to a hidden spring or rivulet.
Harriette Arnow in Seedtime on the Cumberland, describes a type of grotto worn
into the base of a limestone cliff by a river of stream, an undercut feature
known in that country as a rockhouse. Arthurs Sze.
STREAM: A stream is an expression of its watershed; that is,
liquid is literally “expressed” from an ecological matrix, the green breast of
Earth, to form a flow confined by discernible banks. A stream’s water originates
in snow, spring, and rain. At its head, it may ooze from a muddy slope; at its
mouth, it spreads wide and gives itself to another body of water- a lake, a
river, an ocean, or even another stream. Its velocities are various: it can
flow in ribbons, braids, or as flat as a scarf. Sometimes a stream runs
underground or deep in the Earths surface….A stream can also, eventually, cut
through rock like a blade. A stream always moves under the spell of gravity. It
is a medium for transport-silt, pollen, pine needles, and leaves float its
rapids and riffles and are deposited in its bed. Under the water is that
streambed, all rock and roll, a home for sediment and rock and a nesting ground
for fish. Steelhead, trout, and salmon lay their eggs one to three feet deep in
a gravel redd, while benthic invertebrates such as stoneflies, mayflies,
blackflies and caddisflies hide in stream’s cobble. A stream is dynamic- and it
receives, and thus reflects, all that takes place on the land. Gretel Ehrlich
Reflection/Action: What are you favorite words?
What's the land by your home like? Where do you live in relation to the nearest
ocean? For me, out my door, I’m sheltered by the Berkshire
foothills and can see ridgelines (including firetower and highledges) on either
side of my village. Down through the garden, past our orchard (of 5 fruit
trees), cross state street and we can dip into the Deerfield River .
It’s source is up in Southern VT , and flows
South East, over 10 miles (as the crow flies) and as many dams, until it connects
with the heart of the CT river. Just paddle down, past the Holyoke Dam with
it’s fish elevator, helping Shad and Sea Lamprey and other anadromous fish up
to spawn, through the state of CT all the way down to Long Island Sound and you
reach the Atlantic Ocean! What’s the journey like where you live?
PS And now, for something completely different. Here's another way to enter the river that is always flowing from
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.