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“The Friend Who May Not Seem a Friend” – The Cat and the Fire, Post 2 of 3

Tags: fire moses bush
Moses and the Burning Bush
“The Friend Who May Not Seem a Friend” by Lawrence Russ

I wrote to you about the story of the cat at the heart of this photograph, but why is the cat wreathed in flames, and why don’t they consume him?  I’ll respond to that now, not with pretended analysis or explanation, but with a kind of “Biography of Fire.”

In my early twenties, I wrote and published this poem called “The Child” [with audio file of LR reading the poem]: https://lawrenceruss.files.wordpress.com/2021/03/the-child-written-and-read-by-lawrence-russ.wav

He had to learn the way a staircase

climbs without moving.

He knew the huge trees

talked together ‑‑ not knowing particular

signs, but understanding

their hard, isolate trunks,

their high branches shaking before a rain.

 

And then, one autumn night, to walk out

beyond the people’s voices,

the hide‑and‑seek and statues,

beyond the brick houses, into the field

where wind spins a dancer out of dead leaves,

where two cats chase moths through milkweed

and bracken, mingling with the black

 

scraping of crickets.

The half‑moon rising behind him,

he sat down, shyly, in damp grass and thistles.

He took out his book of matches.

And he burned his hand in the field, to seal

his marriage to the several fires

that cannot be touched for long.

I also wrote another “fiery” poem in my early Twenties, that was first published in the Virginia Quarterly Review and then gave its title, “The Burning-Ground,” to a chapbook of my poems.  The poem is dedicated “to the Muse,” the “you” of the poem.  It’s introduced with an excerpt from a Hindu “Hymn to Kali,” which could just as well be be part of a hymn to the Muse:

Because Thou lovest the Burning‑ground,

I have made a Burning‑ground of my heart ‑-

That Thou, dark one, haunter of the Burning‑ground,

Mayest dance Thy eternal dance.

The singer (and Reverend of his own church in Memphis) Al Green, talking about what it takes to sing gospel music, said:  “You either have the spiritual fire or you don’t.”  And I would bet that whatever you believe or think that you believe, a part of you knows what that fire is.

When I was about ten, I had this experience:

I was standing in the backyard of a friend’s house, on the edge of a small wooded, swampy area between our block and a major street in Detroit.  I was watching an ash can fire in the yard.  People nowadays don’t even know what an ash can was, and I haven’t been able to find a picture of one on the Internet.  Imagine a typical aluminum trash can, but made of cyclone fencing instead of solid metal, so that the barrel was a kind of open metal mesh.  You would put your burnable trash into paper grocery bags, stuff them into the can, put on the lid, and then set the trash on fire and let it burn down to ash, which would then blow away.  Right, there’s no way that such a practice would be allowed these days.  Talk about a fire hazard.

But as I watched the fire blazing and dancing about, a kind of slowly flowing, pouring stream of fire reached toward me across the space of the yard — and entered my head through my eyes.  No, I wasn’t merely seeing it, but rather being entered by and immersed in it, without feeling pain or being burned.  I felt more intensely, fully, and expansively alive.  For the minutes that this lasted (I don’t know how many), my sight wasn’t only physical sight, but a living, palpable vision, a communion with the spirit of the fire.

For some years, I neither read nor knew of an experience quite like that, although I read about religious and mystical experiences.  Then I seemed to recognize it in these lines from Blake’s “Auguries of Innocence”:

We are led to Believe a Lie

When we see not Thro’ the Eye

Which was Born in a Night to Perish in a Night

When the Soul Slept in Beams of Light.

And, as you may already be thinking, though it didn’t occur to me until years after that backyard experience, there had been someone else who had a far more exalted, but similar experience, described in Exodus 3:1-4:

Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father in law, the priest of Midian: and he led the flock to the backside of the desert, and came to the mountain of God, even to Horeb.

And the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush: and he looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.

And Moses said, I will now turn aside, and see this great sight, why the bush is not burnt.

And when the Lord saw that he turned aside to see, God called unto him out of the midst of the bush, and said, Moses, Moses. And he said, Here am I.

Moses and the Burning Bush

My experience with that backyard stream of fire had profound, lasting effects on me, and on my vision of art and its purpose and power.  For now, very soon, I’ll continue this story with a kind of biography of fire within this Biography of Fire, tracing the title and core of the movie Chariots of Fire (which most of you probably know and some of you may love as I do) back to its divine and fiery source.



This post first appeared on Lawrenceruss | Photography And The Other Arts In Relation To Society And The Soul., please read the originial post: here

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“The Friend Who May Not Seem a Friend” – The Cat and the Fire, Post 2 of 3

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