Who Is Cowtown Pattie?

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I was Lillie Langtry in another life, and might have a crush on Calamity Jane.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Where the Body Meets the Soul

Terlingua
- Jan Carrington

I know a place where ghostly peaks
Rise high above the swirling sand;
Where old adobe ruins
Melt slowly back into the land;
Where ancient volcanic dragons
Slumber fitfully beneath
Crusted layers of rocky canyons.
Old bones and jagged fossil teeth.

Wild sunsets paint the desert sky
In a thousand different hues,
And time sculpts red arroyos
On every path I choose.
Who turns the mighty pages of this
Huge geological book?
Who frames the windows in the land?
Slow down and take a look.

Night time consumes the sunset,
Silhouetting those ghostly peaks.
Sonorous sounds of silence,
In hushed tones the desert speaks.
Choirs of crystal constellations
Serenade the cosmic whole,
In this deep dark pocket of the desert
Where the body meets the soul.


Mr. Bennett may have left his in that city by the bay, but my own heart was left in the Big Lonesome area of Texas a few years ago. There, among the spindly beauty of ocotillo stalks, my heart was torn into little bits and now lies mingled, hidden in those brave and saucy clumps of scarlett blooms.

Why does this special geographical area speak so loudly to me? Did I live there in another life, do those majestic Chisos mountains possess native American mojo?

I simply do not know.

No, I am not slapping mashed potatoes onto a dinner table diorama, ala Close Encounters, but I am obsessed with the beauty of this rough country.

 
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4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very lovely!

Marie said...

We could be sister souls.....my feelings about that wonderful part of Texas are very similar.

joared said...

I can certainly identify with having my soul caught up in various landscapes of our vast country. The desert west certainly captured mine, along with those ocotillo. Perhaps someday I'll see the area of which you speak.

I'll always carry with me the magnificence of the Red Rock Country of Sedona, AZ though it has lost a bit of luster with the increased population since I first experienced the area in the '60s. That's the risk so many of our spectacular areas.

Hokule'a Kealoha said...

I love any wild place... the desert is a beautiful place to find ones self anew. your photos are wonderful