from 2008......
The other day I went to the little lake
off of Cove Road to take pictures. I didn’t have
anything specific in mind. I thought maybe I would see the wild turkey again,
the one I saw in late May up in a tree. I didn’t, but I got several nice
photographs of dragonflies. And so I sat down to write something about them,
something about stillness, waiting, nearness, trust, consciousness, detail.
After starting and stopping several times, I pretty much decided that there
doesn’t seem to be anything richer than the simple fact of the dragonflies’
presence. The bulbous eyes, the shining tiles of spread wings, the returning
surprise of a narrow powder blue body to a reed, like an airborne stylus or a
comb held up to the light with the teeth pointing away from you. The leaf, the
stem that holds something particular for those tiny feet. A template of
curiosity when the creature settles closer, a way of thinking I let it have
when I consider it but that surely isn’t there at all. How green and blue share
the afternoon light in such a way that the same insect shines like the edge of
a leaf one minute and then five later hums with the Maxfield Parrish brightness
of twilight sky, a needle of blue flame sliding through shadow to water. I’ve
heard dragonflies called snake doctors and so I looked up the term. Seems like
the Native Americans started referring to them as such because of how
dragonflies rode low over or maybe on the backs of snakes. Someone imagined
them stitching up the wounds of injured king snakes and moccasins, I guess, and
there you have it. it’s an image I like, one of wordless collusion between
worlds, of healing transmitted through the thinnest of places to roughness, no
questions asked.
©Laura Sorrells 2008
all rights reserved
