My sight with the clouds’
Unimpeded rest in changing moves
Across the sky: the aged in endless
Unbecoming are at peace.
—Kathleen Raine, Ah, many, many, are the dead… (1978)
I wrote here a couple of weeks back about another Archaeology painting and how are lives will be told in the very distant future by little bits and pieces left behind that, while they may give a general outline of who we were, will not bear any totality. They will never be able to fully reveal our joys, pains, desires and regrets to those future investigators. They won’t be able to detect the ways our eyes gleamed in our happiness or how they sunk in despair. They will not be able to measure how our faces were transformed by a smile. They won’t be able to see our quietness, our sadness, or our boisterousness.
In these things from us left behind they will not observe how we felt looking up at sapphire blue sky on a September morning. Or in watching the rustle of the green leaves of a tree as a summer storm approaches.
These items will tell our stories but the real story of who we are can only be told through these ephemeral elements that are beyond measurement.
About the time I was writing about that earlier Archaeology post, I came across a poem from the late British poet Kathleen Raine (1908-2003) that really drove that point home for me. It was first in the stanza shown at the top, especially the line: the aged in endless Unbecoming are at peace.
That line resonated with me, especially the idea that we are in a constant state of unbecoming that becomes more pronounced as we age and shed so many ideas of our past and present selves. I had just read a 1929 poem, Shadows, from D.H. Lawrence written in the last months of his life while suffering from tuberculosis. The final lines of his poem very much echo this idea of unbecoming:
I am in the hands of the unknown God,
he is breaking me down to his own oblivion
to send me forth on a new morning, a new man
This idea that we are being broken down into an oblivion made sense to me in a way that it would not have when I was much younger. It made the thought that we might someday be defined by things that might seem insignificant to us now seemed to make sense as well. These were mere things that might have once held meaning for us but were shed and left behind in the process of our unbecoming.
That might seem a daunting, even sad, thing to many of us. But it is merely the way of all things. It is a transition from one state of being to another, from the unbecoming of one state to the becoming of another. Nothing to fear, nothing to be done but watch and appreciate the clouds in the sky.
Raine’s poem is shown in full below as well as a reading of it by British philosopher/psychiatrist Dr. Iain McGilchrist. I particularly how she describes, in her unbecoming, how a cloud presently crossing the sky or green buds being gently stirred by the wind take on more meaning than the joys and pains she has known in the past.
Her poem has a feeling that that I see in the painting at the top, Archaeology: The Silence of the World. This is emphasized by the many chairs in the artifact field. I often cite my Red Chair as being mostly being symbolic of the loss of another or the fading of memory. Both seem to fit here. I also think Raine’s poem and this painting have a similar ethereal quality.
I am also throwing in a song. Yeah, it’s also in the same theme– sort of– but Leonard Cohen‘s humor in the intro to a short version of his Tower of Song make it worth a listen.
There’s lot here to read, listen to, and think about. Probably too much for a Friday morning. Well, like many things, that’s the way it is.
If you don’t feel like reading it, listening to it, or thinking about it, then maybe you should leave now. You know– git.
Ah, many, many, are the dead…
Ah, many, many are the dead
Who hold this pen and with my fingers write:
What am I but their memory
Whose afterlife I live, who haunt
My waking and my sleep with the untold?
My sight with the clouds’
Unimpeded rest in changing moves
Across the sky: the aged in endless
Unbecoming are at peace.
I could have told much by the way
But having reached this quiet place can say
Only that old joy and pain mean less
Than these green garden buds
The wind stirs gently.
In the high lonely hills
Long ago astray: why
Did the great merciless winds
Fill my heart with joy?
What have I to regret
Who, being old,
Have forgotten who I am?
I have known much in my time
But now behold
Procession of slow clouds across my sky.
This little house
No smaller than the world
Nor I lonely
Dwelling in all that is.
Young or old
What was I but the story told
By an unageing one?
–Kathleen Raine, from The Oracle in the Heart (1978)













