[Image: artist’s rendering of “Sea-Ty,” a bowl-shaped floating-but-underwater city, open to the sky. The page where I found this image says that it “resembles a traditional hillside town with a network of stairs connecting the various levels.” Each of those little box-type things, apparently, is a house or other building.]
From whiskey river (italicized portion):
Every human being is intended to have a character of his own; to be what no others are, and to do what no other can do. Our common nature is to be unfolded in unbounded diversities. It is rich enough for infinite manifestations. It is to wear innumerable forms of beauty and glory.
(William Ellery Channing [source])
…and:
Sometimes, When the Light
Sometimes, when the light strikes at odd angles
and pulls you back into childhoodand you are passing a crumbling mansion
completely hidden behind old willowsor an empty convent guarded by hemlocks
and giant firs standing hip to hip,you know again that behind that wall,
under the uncut hair of the willowssomething secret is going on,
so marvelous and dangerousthat if you crawled through and saw,
you would die, or be happy forever.
(Lisel Mueller [source])
…and:
The Night, the Porch
To stare at nothing is to learn by heart
What all of us will be swept into, and baring oneself
To the wind is feeling the ungraspable somewhere close by.
Trees can sway or be still. Day or night can be what they wish.
What we desire, more than a season or weather, is the comfort
Of being strangers, at least to ourselves. This is the crux
Of the matter, which is why even now we seem to be waiting
For something whose appearance would be its vanishing—
The sound, say, of a few leaves falling, or just one leaf,
Or less. There is no end to what we can learn. The book out there
Tells us as much, and was never written with us in mind.
(Mark Strand [source])