Gretel Ehrlich - Unsolaced: Along the Way to All That Is
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Facing the Wave
In the Empire of Ice
The Future of Ice
This Cold Heaven
John Muir: Natures Visionary
A Blizzard Year
Questions of Heaven
A Match to the Heart
Arctic Heart
Drinking Dry Clouds
Islands, the Universe, Home
Heart Mountain
The Solace of Open Spaces
Copyright 2021 by Gretel Ehrlich
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Pantheon Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York, and distributed in Canada by Penguin Random House Canada Limited, Toronto.
Pantheon Books and colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for permission to reprint previously published materials:
Counterpoint Press: Excerpt from Valley Wind by Lu Yun from Encompassing Nature by Robert Torrence, copyright 1999 by Robert Torrence. Reprinted by permission of Counterpoint Press.
Rifat Latifi: Excerpts from Move above tree line and Night has become my body guard by Rifat Latifi. Reprinted by permission of the author.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Name: Ehrlich, Gretel, author.
Title: Unsolaced : along the way to all that is / Gretel Ehrlich.
Description: First edition. New York : Pantheon Books, 2021.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020013919 (print). LCCN 2020013920 (ebook). ISBN 9780307911797 (hardcover). ISBN 9780307911803 (ebook).
Subjects: LCSH : Ehrlich, GretelHomes and haunts. Ehrlich, GretelTravel. Authors, American20th centuryBiography.
Classification: LCC PS 3555. H 72 Z 46 2021 (print) | LCC PS 3555. H 72 (ebook) | DDC 818/.5409 [ B ]dc23
LC record available at lccn.loc.gov/2020013919
LC ebook record available at lccn.loc.gov/2020013920
Ebook ISBN9780307911803
www.pantheonbooks.com
Cover photograph by Joe Riis
Cover design by Kelly Blair
ep_prh_5.6.1_c0_r0
For Neal
I rhyme
To see myself, to set the darkness echoing.
Seamus Heaney , Personal Helicon
The ribbed hill, gray to green. Pronghorn grazing in first light. The folded mountains, two owls calling, five low-flying geese, and the near-frantic four-note morning call of the robin. Im in an off-grid cabin set on a glacial moraine surrounded by kettle ponds where, ten thousand years ago, retreating glaciers left lumps of ice. Green rings every pond and the white folded mountains dive down to foothills threaded with blue flax, sagebrush, and native bunchgrass.
At dawn a calligraphic shadowloose, wild, and precise, like old Chinese grass scriptcurtains the forested east hill. I walk inside it, then emerge in sun trying to re-create parts of my past, as when I once hid behind Wyoming sagebrush watching sheep graze when all this began. Would it be better to write nothing at all? No doubt it would. Yet here, I feel most at home.
Everything is moving, but theres so much we cant see: how thought comes into being; how grasses and trees connect; how animals know weather, experience pleasure and love; how whats under the soil, the deep microbial empire, can hold twenty billion tons of carbon in its hands.
The mind splices fragments of sensation and language into story after story. The blood in my veins and every blade of grass is oxygen, sugar, photosynthesis, genetic expression, electrochemistry, and time. I watch clouds crush the last bit of pink sky. Breath slips even as I inhale, even as snow falls out of season and mud thaws, even as lightning ignites a late spring.
I try to calculate the time it takes to scratch these words. Thoughts flare and fade. Ink across paper registers a kind of time theft during which I fictionalize an ongoing present, the ever-elusive me, you, here, and there, all existing somehow in a slightly fraudulent now.
My cabin faces stacked peaks that reach 13,800 feet and are part of the Wind River Mountains. Those mountains are my minds wall and wellspring. Down here, the light is peach colored, and as the sun shifts, one loose shadow, like thought, takes on a sharp edge.
Nearby, a meadowlark sings the western meadowlark anthem. Territory is presence. Presence means song, then nest. Nest means egg, fledgling. Time flies and stars are dying. I try to count the split-end strands of lost friendships spliced to new loves, betrayals and failures, houses built, lived in, and sold, as if nothing could possibly be held close or hold me motionless, as if there were no door I couldnt exit, no door that would let me in.
What has been forgotten, gone unnoticed? Stacked notebooks dont begin to frame it all, yet I page through them omnivorously, trying to catch a glimpse of myself and others, and the places weve lived in. How do we know anything? How do we lose it so easily? Almost daily I return to the high country. Mountain is shoulder: I rub against it and step forward. The hinge squeals, an arm lifts, a rock wall slides, and for a moment the mountains inner sanctum is revealed.
Later, down-trail, I lie on grass in the sun with my horse grazing nearby and touch the frayed ends of memory, a soft mane of them, as if fingering braille.
In that eyelid of time between night and now, the horse whinnies at five thirty in the morning, startling a pair of sandhill cranes that have nested nearby. Its early May and the pond sucks green from the field, lays it on its surface like a coat. The suns metallic sheen spreads between cattails whose million seeds have yet to burst. I get up and pace, sink back on the couch, walk up the hill, sit on bare ground between two muddy ruts. A whole day goes by. Night is no cushion. Nor is comfort. Its been snowing and raining here, and the mud deepens.
Ive moved too muchsomething like twenty-eight times since I came of ageand I cant always anchor my spirit. But why would I want to? Anchor it to what? Ive loved each place deeply. I try to imagine the comfort of samenessthose friends who live in the houses where they were born or to which they returned, and imagine too the discomfort it must arouse, the sense of confinement.
Sun comes out. Freedom is the green pond turning blue, the muskrat pushing dried reeds and grass to the far bank while making a summer house. I imagine hundreds of mud-and-straw huts clustered together, lit by glowing lanterns like the ones I saw on Kyotos Kamo River. My own building projecta writing studiois clamorously under way. Yet Im saddened to see sawn and planed logs stacked up. If I listened, I might hear the chaos of those trees being dismembered, their bark peeled, their tendons sliced and the unbearable noise of nail guns assaulting their limbs.
Spring is this: One day the sandhill cranes dance; the next day swallows arrive and push bluebirds from their nest box. A week later an aspen leafs out, while on the mountain, beetles kill off every whitebark pine. Seventeen pronghorn antelope attempt a river crossing and are washed downstream, get out, try again. A prim gray cloud passes over. A porcupine sleeps in the willow, one leg dangling, black nose pointed up smelling for fire, smelling for rain.
Worldwide, violent storms split trees in half, persistent droughts suck bones, rain loosens whole mountains: a mud flow destroys my childhood home, a cornice crumbles, a typhoon drowns a hundred people in Japan, hurricanes raze Caribbean islands, a volcano blows, an avalanche takes three friends.
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