Upend the rain stick and what happens next is a music you never would have known to listen for (detail)
Charcoal & Pastel on Paper | CB | c. 2002
Charcoal & Pastel on Paper | CB | c. 2002
THE RAIN STICK
Upend the rain stick and what happens next
Is a music that you never would have known
To listen for. In a cactus stalk
Downpour, sluice-rush, spillage and backwash
Come flowing through. You stand there like a pipe
Being played by water, you shake it again lightly
And diminuendo runs through all its scales
Like a gutter stopping trickling. And now here comes
A sprinkle of drops out of the freshened leaves,
Then subtle little wets off grass and daisies;
Then glitter-drizzle, almost-breaths of air.
Upend the stick again. What happens next
Is undiminished for having happened once,
Twice, ten, a thousand time before.
Who cares if all the music that transpires
Is the fall of grit or dry seeds through a cactus?
You are like a rich man entering heaven
Through the ear of a raindrop. Listen now again.
Seamus Heaney
I unpacked this drawing last week, one of a batch I've had stored away in my little 'side room'. I'd not visited this particular image for a very long time and was surprised by the ways in which it seems - at least, to me - to speak into our current times. Seamus Heaney's Rain Stick provided the original prompt way back in the early 2000s but there's a lot more going on here than the music of that poem. It's always a mystery to me to discover the questions that make their way into our work without our knowing it and without our conscious participation (even when we think we're fully, mindfully engaged?). Behind this image, I found another drawing I'd long considered 'lost', 'gone', 'evaporated' - what was I thinking when I taped it in behind the Rain Stick? (I might post it here some time; it shows a sun dial atop a craggy outcrop - an exploration into Time after repeated readings of T. S. Eliot's Burnt Norton.)
Life is certainly full of unexpected surprises at the moment, including - yesterday - a visit to my garden from a broody, rust-coloured hen. . . lovely! I wonder if she left an egg amongst the red-legged silver beet?
This week's editor on the Tuesday Poem hub is Harvey Molloy (his accompanying commentary is exquisite)
with the tender poem Tika
"Goodbye takes the form of a blessing.
My family press tika on our foreheads
rupees into my palm.
Mountain-high through time and air
the red paint dries, the rice grains fall
leaving a trail that could surely lead us home. . . " Saradha Koirala
Upend the rain stick and what happens next is a music you never would have known to listen for
Charcoal & Pastel on Paper | CB | c. 2002