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Taken from "Where the Sky Began," by John Madson, Chapter 3 "The Lawns
of God," pp. 52-53: "Not even Rip Van Winkle could have slept for twenty years on a prairie. The place for that is a deep glen that encloses a man in a snug vessel of trees and hills, insulating him from the sky and wind. A grassland crackles and flows with stimuli, charging a man to get on with something. A prairie never rests for long, nor does it permit anything else to rest. It has barriers to neither men nor wind and encourages them to run together, which may be why grasslands men are notorious travelers and hard-goers, driven by wind and running with it, fierce and free. Forests have surely housed many free and fierce people, but I somehow imagine them as being preoccupied with laying ambushes in thickets, worshiping oak trees, and painting their bellies blue. I could never take Druids seriously. They're not in the same class as Cossacks, Zulus, Masai, Mongols, Comanches, Sioux, the highland clans of treeless moors, and trail drovers tearing up Front Street, Grasslanders all. There was a vein of wild exultation in such men. It wasn't just the high-protein diet, nor even that some of those men were mounted— although the horse people were among the wildest of all. I have a hunch that it was the mood of the land, stimulating its people with openness, hyperventilating them with freedom in a world of open skylines and few secrets. Such Grasslanders never seemed to harbor the nasty little superstitions that flourish in fetid jungles and dank forests. Their superstitions were taller, their sagas and legends more airy and broad, and running through their cultures was a level conviction that they were the elite. While some forest people retreated into the shadowlands, men of the open had no choice but to breast the fuller world—and often came to do so with pride and even arrogance. It was a sense that was transferred almost intact when men left the land and took to the open seas, or learned to fly. They were all part of the same—wanderers beyond horizons, children of the wind who belonged more to sky than to earth, conscious of being under the Great Eye . . ." "The Lawns of God"..... Hm..... And here I sit, hunkered under the trees.....like some primordial proto-primate wondering whether its seed supply will withstand the winter weather! Choices. Everybody wants 'em.....but nobody is really happy about what he does with 'em. What life really needs more of is do overs. |
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On Nov 15, 7:41*pm, Giles wrote:
Choices. *Everybody wants 'em.....but nobody is really happy about what he does with 'em. *What life really needs more of is do overs. Damned keyboard. Meant to sign out. Wolfgang still, if madson is right, the thing to do if you're a grasslander is to keep moving. eventually, you'll end up moving out......and there you are, right back under the trees! |
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