Curious Wine

So I spent the actual night of Twelfth Night with a dilemma. There were two events I wanted to attend. The first was a parade for Joan of Arc, whose birthday is January 6th. (Interesting side note: Her decisive victory at Orleans took place on June 18th, my birthday.) The second event was the meeting of a group that will gather regularly for the next few months to read Plato’s Symposium or the “Dialogues on Love.” So hard to choose: Plato or Joan of Arc? Sitting in the Latter Library, reading and talking about ancient Greek philosophies of love? Or a torch-lit, medieval tambourine parade through the French Quarter, following a woman wearing gilded armor and riding horseback? Yeah, just another Wednesday night in New Orleans. In the end, the frigid weather drove me to the library and the Platonic ideal of Eros. My spirit follows Joan always. She’ll just have to be content with my moral support this year.

There was a lot for my brain to chew on last night, but the portion I’ll relay here is the opening scene of the Symposium. Socrates and Aristodemus walk to the party at Agathon’s house. Aristodemus turns around to look for Socrates and finds that the “truth-loving eccentric” has wandered off by himself and appears to have fallen into a trance. Socrates is listening to his “daemon”, the inner voice that spoke his own genius to him, the voice that Socrates placed as an authority higher (to him) than the gods. It was Socrates’ faith in his own daemon that eventually got him condemned to death for heresy.

This is Joan of Arc’s story as well. Her steadfast allegiance to the voices that came to her from St. Michael, St. Catherine and St. Margaret, and her refusal to allow the priests to be her intermediary in an apprehension of the divine . . . all this was the evidence the Catholic Church used to convict her of witchcraft and burn her to death.

Emily too, placed her own spiritual authority above all others. She kept her mouth shut about it, though. And kept her skin. Was she afraid? Or was she simply content to know herself without being “public — like a Frog —/ To tell one’s name — the livelong June —/ To an admiring Bog!” She certainly refused any exposure to scrutiny and had nothing approaching the public life of Joan or Socrates. Maybe she was being smart and self-contained. Maybe she knew she was holding onto a few thousand pounds of dynamite.

Makes me think again more deeply about the advice I received long ago: “Don’t be afraid to know what you know.” More than anything else this fear of knowing what you know is the thing that stops a person from hearing herself. That’s all it takes: First, a focused, intentional stillness—stop, put away the world, be still. Then a sincere willingness to listen. Allow what wishes to be spoken to have its say.

Emily has this to say today:

#579, c. 1862

I had been hungry, all the Years —
My Noon had come — to dine —
I trembling drew the Table near —
And touched the Curious Wine —

‘Twas this on Tables I had seen —
When turning, hungry, Home
I looked in Windows, for the Wealth
I could not hope — for Mine —

I did not know the ample Bread —
‘Twas so unlike the Crumb
The Birds and I, had often shared
In Nature’s — Dining Room —

The Plenty hurt me — ’twas so new —
Myself felt ill — and odd —
As Berry — of a Mountain Bush —
Transplanted — to the Road —

Nor was I hungry — so I found
That Hunger — was a way
Of Persons outside Windows —
The Entering — takes away —

This bread and wine stand on the communion table. Emily hungers for that bond through spiritual awakening. She offers a meditation on what is holy in the company of like-minded others. It’s lonely knowing what you know. The pilgrim seeks other pilgrims. The phrase I love the most here is “curious wine”. This is the wine that makes you more curious as you drink it. The wine that whets your palate for more, a deeper plunge into that embrace. The hunger for home, wherever or whoever that may be.

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Twelfth Night

Today is the Feast of the Epiphany when the light of the Christ child formally appears to the world. This illumination lies just below conscious apprehension, in the peace of a sleeping baby. Just twelve days after his quiet arrival in the dark. Hence it is also known as Twelfth Night. And yes! The inauguration of the Carnival Season. (I boomerang into the Pagan Rites so fast, it’ll give you head rush.) Time to start working on my costume . . . which will be some variation on the fairy theme. My usual. This time with a sort of 15th century Tumbler/Magician feel to it. If you can imagine that. I can imagine it. I have a picture of it in my head. Only six weeks to make this a reality. I can do it!

Back in the day when I lived in New England, I used to sink into depression during winter. It’s the natural emotional response to the cold, dark season. Living in New Orleans has cured me of that trend. Here winter is the beginning of a spectacular celebration. And a great excuse to dress up in silly costumes. The Carnival infects everyone. It’s impossible to avoid and therefore impossible to be depressed in winter in New Orleans. (August is another matter.)

Emily sends a timely note from beyond the beyond. (Amazing how she does this, but I’m done trying to figure it out.)

#445, c. 1862

‘Twas just this time, last year, I died —
I know I heard the Corn,
When I was carried by the Farms —
It had the Tassels on —

I thought how yellow it would look —
When Richard went to mill —
And then, I wanted to get out,
But something held my will.

I thought just how Red — Apples wedged
The Stubble’s joints between —
And the Carts stooping round the fields
To take the Pumpkins in —

I wondered which would miss me, least,
And when Thanksgiving, came,
If Father’d multiply the plates —
To make an even Sum —

And would it blur the Christmas glee
My Stocking hang too high
For any Santa Claus to reach
The Altitude of me —

But this sort, grieved myself,
And so, I thought the other way,
How just this time, some perfect year —
Themself, should come to me —

Only cool customer Emily could report on her own death with such sang-froid. (I love that word: “cold blood”.) I don’t think Emily has ice water flowing in her veins per se. I do think her curiosity floats above the tumult of her heart. That’s her gift. To exist in a cool space of contemplation where everything is worthy of her intelligent scrutiny.

How like her to continue walking around and observing the world after she has died. Wouldn’t we all like to do that? To see if or how we are missed? In a peculiar sense she is both honest and resilient to say she died. That is the truth of her heart. What is also true, however, is that she has the mental clarity to review the impact of that loss. And to see how the world would fold in and fill the empty space. Not that her “death” doesn’t matter, but that the sun will continue to rise. Crops will come to harvest. Christmas will make merry. People will sit down to dinner.

Emily’s “Altitude” is too high for any of these mortal pleasures. Furthermore she has the power to imagine the resurrection. That “Themself” may come to her. That’s all it takes, the simple return. Not hope for retrieving the past. She knows she’s dead. She also knows that cycles are real. Although dead, Emily still guides her own thoughts. She determines the quality imposed on this scene, this loss, this end. Only She. The Creator and Destroyer.

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The Soul’s Unfurnished Rooms

Good morning and Happy New Year. I was pleasantly surprised to see during my absence that y’all are still reading this thing. So I’ll keep writing it, I guess. Until I run out of things to say.

There was an interesting lunar eclipse on New Year’s Eve. I spent it on my porch smoking cigarettes. My one-day-a-year indulgence. Then I quit smoking as my new year’s resolution. It works every time. My smoking partner is also my Saints Consort. We discussed the upcoming game. Then to our great dismay, the “bless-you boys” lost to the Panthers on Sunday. Pretty much what we expected, given that Payton pulled Brees from the starting line-up. To save his arm for the play-offs, yadda, yadda, yadda, yadda. Yes, I understand why this was a smart tactical decision. They ended the season 13 and 3, which is great. Still, I object on moral grounds. Basically Payton threw the last game because he could. The thinking goes: Why bother playing the game if it does not explicitly lead to the Superbowl? I ask: Is this a game or isn’t it?

Emily’s remarks follow:

#393, c. 1862

Did Our Best Moments last —
‘Twould supersede the Heaven —
A few — and they by Risk — procure —
So this Sort — are not given —

Except as stimulants — in
Cases of Despair —
Or Stupor — The Reserve —
These Heavenly Moments are —

A Grant of the Divine —
That Certain as it Comes —
Withdraws — and leaves the dazzled Soul
In her unfurnished Rooms

She warns us . . . or perhaps this is more of a neutral philosophical observation that we cannot live on the peaks of our life experiences, only the valleys. The purpose of these Best Moments is to give us a glimpse of the good orderly direction that shapes our lives. A hint of magic beneath the drear. “In case of despair, break glass and remember that joy!” Otherwise, why would we bother?

She also points out that if our so-called Best Moments were the everyday condition of our lives, that would make Heaven obsolete. We need that sharp contrast of our best moments against our worst moments (or just ordinary moments) to have some definition around our experience. Without that, Heaven becomes mundane.

Sorry, going off topic— I can’t help but remark that it is unbearably cold here. I know it’s churlish of me to complain about winter in New Orleans, but that doesn’t stop me. (My fingers and toes are numb! And I hate it!) Especially absurd to complain given that I have just returned from the Northeast where another four inches of snow accumulated on the ground as my plane took off. Despite the weather, I had a lovely visit with my nephews. We went ice skating, and I remembered how to skate backwards and make figure eights and even a few brave spins. The joy! I just needed a teeny flippy skirt and tights to be complete. I am a Yank in my bones after all, although my poor fingers and toes prefer living in the balmy swamp.

I love Christmas, but I am also relieved when it’s over. Same with Mardi Gras. These Best Moments, super-saturated with sweet indulgence, are exhausting. I enjoy the return to mundane home, the ordinary tasks, walking Lance, straightening the house, taking a breath and reviewing the coming year. What will I make of it? So glad I quit smoking . . .

For now I am meditating on the image of “the dazzled Soul/ In her unfurnished Rooms”. The first thought links back to her earlier poem, where Emily told us “The Truth must dazzle gradually”, suggesting the soft punch of the poem on her readers, while here she offers her own Soul in a state of bedazzlement. All this blinding sparkle. Over what? A joy. The gift that leaves even Emily’s soul bereft of words. What was the thing that touched her so deeply? The sense that arises from the image is the dissolving remnant of a memory, some peak fulfillment. The Soul’s rooms are empty afterward because nothing else remains after such a joy. The force of the pleasure blasted everything away so that now the space around the Soul is blessedly empty. No clutter. No chatter. Lots of room for the unfolding awareness of contrast. Emily brings her focus to a pure knowledge of what was . . . by staying in what is.

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