A-walking through a burial ground as autumn’s bleak winds buffet me, I hear plainchant that makes no sound come from a church behind bare trees.
As I wade through seas of fallen leaves that blanket tombs of fallen folk, the whitewashed church’s lichened eaves are loosely draped like a priestly cope.
Behind the church’s wooden door comes silence sounding out a song. Its words unsaid, no rigid score, to the whirlwind this primal hymn belongs.
Well fortified by thick stone walls a-quarried from the craggy heart of this carved earth’s basalt halls, this house still plays its sacred harp.
For though someday the sun will rise above this temple’s gaping ruin, its oaken rafters open to the skies, there will go on the formless tune
whose notes compose creation’s tale that’s told unwritten in lettered fire. In my lungs I breathe the words to join someday the hidden choir.
With that, this door did not lead inside that bastion built for worshipping. Her song instead had opened wide my spirit for all this life will bring.
Inspired by a recent visit to the cemetery of a 13th century church, which has partially whitewashed rough stone walls and a great oaken door.