[Video: Rita Wilson discusses why a movie whose emotional peak involves the Empire State
Building is beautiful; Tom Hanks and Vincent Garber prefer a more… prosaic sort of beauty.]
From whiskey river (italicized portion):
I shrugged my shoulders, muttered “back soon,” and plunged into the darkness. At first I couldn’t see anything. I fumbled along the cobblestone street. I lit a cigarette. Suddenly the moon appeared from behind a black cloud, lighting a white wall that was crumbled in places. I stopped, blinded by such whiteness. Wind whistled slightly. I breathed the air of the tamarinds. The night hummed, full of leaves and insects. Crickets bivouacked in the tall grass. I raised my head: up there the stars too had set up camp. I thought that the universe was a vast system of signs, a conversation between giant beings. My actions, the cricket’s saw, the star’s blink, were nothing but pauses and syllables, scattered phrases from that dialogue. What word could it be, of which I was only a syllable? Who speaks the word? To whom is it spoken? I threw my cigarette down on the sidewalk. Falling, it drew a shining curve, shooting out brief sparks like a tiny comet.
(Octavio Paz [source])
…and:
The Ant
The ant moves on his tiny Sephardic feet.
The flute is always glad to repeat the same note.
The ocean rejoices in its dusky mansion.Often bears are piled up close to each other.
In their world it’s just one hump after another.
It’s like looking at piles of many melons.You and I have spent so many hours working.
We have paid dearly for the life we have.
It’s all right if we do nothing tonight.I am so much in love with mournful music
That I don’t bother to look for violinists.
The aging peepers satisfy me for hours.I love to see the fiddlers tuning up their old fiddles,
And the singer urging the low notes to come.
I saw her trying to keep the dawn from breaking.You and I have worked hard for the life we have.
But we love to remember the way the soul leaps
Over and over into the lonely heavens.
(Robert Bly [source])
Not from whiskey river:
Taken all in all, the sky is a miraculous achievement. It works and for what it is designed to accomplish it is as infallible as anything in nature. I doubt whether any of us could think of a way to improve on it, beyond maybe shifting a local cloud from here to there on occasion. The word “chance” does not serve to account well for structures of such magnificence. There may have been elements of luck in the emergence of chloroplasts, but once these things were on the scene, the evolution of the sky became absolutely ordained. Chance suggests alternatives, other possibilities, different solutions. This may be true for gills and swimbladders and forebrains, matters of detail, but not for the sky. There was simply no other way to go.
We should credit it for its sheer size and perfection of function, it is far and away the grandest product of collaboration in all of nature. It breathes for us, and it does another thing for our pleasure. Each day, millions of meteorites fall against the outer limits of the membrane and are burned to nothing by the friction. Without this shelter, our surface would long since have become the pounded powder of the moon. Even though our receptors are not sensitive enough to hear it, there is comfort in knowing that the sound is there overhead, like the random noise of rain on the roof at night.
(Lewis Thomas [source])
…and:
Even as a child, [Pellegrino] said, he knew he belonged up in the sky, not on the ground, and I quote: “…just as a fish flopping on a riverbank knows it belongs in the water.” As soon as he was old enough, he went up in the sky at the controls of all sorts of airplanes, from World War I Jennies to commercial transports.
“But I felt like an invader, an alien up there, tearing up the sky with my propellers, dirtying it up with my noise and exhaust,” he went on. “I didn’t go up in a balloon until I was thirty-five. That was a dream came true. That was Heaven, and I was alive.
“I became the sky.”
(from an “interview” by Kurt Vonnegut of the late Peter Pellegrino, a famous balloonist [source])
…and:
Once, Driving West of Billings, Montana
I ran into the afterlife.
No fluffy white clouds. Not even stars. Only sky
dark as the inside of a movie theater
at three in the afternoon and getting bigger all the time,
expanding at terrific speed
over the car which was disappearing,
flattening out empty
as the fields on either side.It was impossible to think
under that rain louder than engines.
I turned off the radio to listen, let my head
fill up until every bone
was vibrating—sky.Twice, trees of lightning
broke out of the asphalt. I could smell
the highway burning. Long after, saw blue smoke twirling
behind the eyeballs, lariats
doing fancy rope tricks, jerking silver
dollars out of the air, along with billiard cues, ninepins.I was starting to feel I could drive forever
when suddenly one of those trees was right in front of me.
Of course, I hit it—
branches shooting stars down the windshield,
poor car shaking like a dazed cow.
I thought this time for sure I was dead
so whatever was on the other side had to be eternity.Saw sky enormous as nowhere. Kept on driving.
(Susan Mitchell [source])
…and:
Frankly, I was so entranced “seeing” that I did not think about the sight. If there was a subconscious thought of it, it was in the nature of gratitude to God for having given the blind seeing minds. As I now recall the view I had from the Empire Tower, I am convinced that, until we have looked into darkness, we cannot know what a divine thing vision is…
I will concede that my guides saw a thousand things that escaped me from the top of the Empire Building, but I am not envious. For imagination creates distances and horizons that reach to the end of the world. It is as easy for the mind to think in stars as in cobble-stones. Sightless Milton dreamed visions no one else could see. Radiant with an inward light, he send forth rays by which mankind beholds the realms of Paradise.
(Helen Keller, on what she “saw” from the top of the Empire State Building [source])
cynth says
Nice loop, John. Thanks for the clip from Sleepless, one of my personal favorites, although right after this actress does the thing about An Affair to Remember, when Tom Hanks and Victor Garber do the thing about the war movie, it’s pretty good, too. I always like to see quotes from Helen Keller. She has such a unique perspective on, well, just about everything. Thanks for a “visioning” post.
John says
That “loop,” as you call it, did work out nicely — and completely by accident. Both the video and the Helen Keller letter were last-minute additions. :)
Jayne says
God I love that scene (Sleepless). You’ve Got Mail with Hanks/Ryan is another of my favorites. I forced Lu to watch it with me not long ago. She didn’t like it at first, but ended up loving the story.
Well, you know about my Midnight under the Milky Way. I love the Thomas piece–“ordained” is a striking way to put it. But unlike Pellegrino, I do not particularly like to be in the sky. If there is an alternative method–train, auto, ship, anything more grounded–I will take it. I think that something as miraculous as the sky is best observed from the edge of the sea. ;)
I’d read that quote from Keller before, it still amazes me. How radiant she was.
John says
Y’know, I hadn’t thought about it until just now… but now that I have thought about it, for this post of mine I could have quoted any of a number of passages from that post of yours. Now I’m embarrassed I didn’t think of it!
I’ve never taken a balloon flight but have sometimes thought about how… how strange it must be. In a plane, you’re constantly reminded that this is a big deal — the mere fact of all that tonnage of metal and humanity being held miles above the earth. The plane’s frame never stops vibrating. I’ve never worn noise-canceling headphones, but I have once or twice turned off both hearing aids during a flight, and I can tell you there’s no escaping the sensory flood. But in a balloon (at least between those “light the gas-burner” moments), it’d just be… well, okay, there’d be wind sound. But nothing else, right? But the visuals…!
Jayne says
Oh my goodness, no, I’d stick out like a sore thumb next to these artists! (See, I can’t even think of my own simile.)
Yep, you’ve confirmed my suspicion– there isn’t a noise muffling switch out there that would make a flight more comfortable for me. It is the tonnage. All that weight and gravity. Not to mention everyone’s concerned look whenever there’s the least bit of turbulence. (Or is that just me?) Oy. Break out the Ativan! ;)