Sunday, July 16, 2017

ONE WITH THE WIND






All photos by the incomparable Marty Kittrell, who has explored Mississippi for years, camera in hand.  

Any drive through the Delta will yield quite a number of small scenes away-off in the fields---the brave shapes of compact churches which seem to populate these rolling acres more freely than tractors sometimes.   They’re mostly deserted, these last small gathering-houses of the locals, as the ebb and flow of population mimed the changes in the state---prosperity or poverty, as they carried the denizens to greener fields, so to speak, or as the young’uns moved swiftly away in search of jobs and a better life, the members remaining slowly took their places in the small plots of the surrounding cemetery.  



This one reminds me of a dissatisfied baby with a Kewpie curl , standing on his little concrete feet.

The last time I was down there, in 2004, you could still see the withering husks of old country churches across the fields---their white paint dimmed to gray by time and heat and field-dust.   So many of them seem to be put down like little chalk Monopoly pieces, with no rhyme or reason in the middle of a REAL Nowhere, with the narrow gravel of their ingress hidden by rolling rows of cotton and beans.  And many of them are deserted now---stripped to the echoes, as the exodus of the farm-folk and country-dwellers emptied those timeworn pews.   Even when I still lived there, countless empty edifices raised their bowing heads above that rich black gumbo, still humbly waiting for the faithful to return.   
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And many a beautiful topiary of the encroaching kudzu has, at its center, a small chapel, still with altar, pews, and choir-loft nestled within.





One of the great mysteries to me was always the leaving of things---it was as if one night after services, there was a mysterious mass departure from the Chapel of St. Mary Celeste.   Many a small building still holds hymnbooks, offering plates, the necessaries for Lord’s Supper, even notices on the wall and the flyaway dimness of printed programs blown down beneath the pews like the dried leaves on the porch.


These wonderful old-to-me plates which held wine/grape juice for The Lord’s Supper are a neat successor to the Chalice, the Cup of the really olden years.   I love the idea of them, and I love the inset glisten of the tee-ninecy cups, but the whole affair, from felty bottom to small Cross-shaped finial on the lid, always strikes me as a charming meld of carousel and centrifuge.   I wonder why someone didn’t rescue this tray, and take the cups away in it.  I wonder more how they got all those wee jiggling cups home without breakage.



Some of the structures have lost walls, roofs, steeples, and weather has savaged the contents, with all the paper and wood frayed by the elements    The pews still stand, sagging with the years; old number boards and banners hang their messages from decades past, and the floors creak their remembrance of footsteps long stilled.   



A few of the places seem still bright and the congregation just dismissed---you can practically hear the notes of "What a friend . . ." ringing across the pews as the Sunday suits and the bright hats nod their way out. 







Except for the languishing pianos.  They seem to take the abandonment hardest, with the yellowing keys and the dust sifting in. I think they are the saddest relics, with their once-bright varnish bubbled and chipped, and the yellowed keys swelled above the key bed like protruding teeth. 





They're used to the human touch and that symbiotic pairing which makes the music; without the hands to play them, they die---they faint---they fail.



There should be a State Commission for the gentle removal and preservation of all the frangible religious artifacts left to the wind.  I'd write my Representative for that.







6 comments:

  1. Such a sorry state of affairs to see these buildings and their contents abandoned and lost to time and the elements. It all reminds me of the photographs of the Chernobyl disaster where entire schools, hospitals, villages etc. have been deserted as people flee disaster. At least in those images, one can rightly understand it all.

    The haunting photography of Ms. Kittrell is only enhanced by your powerfully evokative language, beautiful!

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  2. A sad testament to the affairs of our religious being... falling by the wayside.

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  3. My dear Rachel,

    What an evocative piece of writing. You've always been a passionate writer about history, landscape, buildings, and every street is haunted by memories of illustrious visitors (I love your description of the churchgoers: "You can practically hear the notes of "What a friend . . ." ringing across the pews as the Sunday suits and the bright hats nod their way out.")

    A couple of years ago, I stumbled across an old Presbyterian Church in the middle of the countryside and there was no one there except the birds that were the only signs of life. I wrote about the serenity I felt while I went into the church.

    Thank you so much for your lovely message. I've missed your charming visits. I hope you have a splendid time with your Sweetpea. There is nothing better than spending time with one's beloved and eating some wholesome homemade dishes. It is a busy holiday time and I am so grateful that you took time to drop me a line. Have a great weekend and take good care.

    With best wishes, ASD

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  4. I have been thru some of those same highways & byways of rural Mississippi and know whence you beautifully write. Similar scenes I've seen in the Midwest but evoke less sense of loss...always feel blessed to read from your hymn sheet.

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  5. I hate the thought of deserted churches. I think of how it must once have been full of life. Of music and worship. How many prayers must have been said there. How many lives changed. How many laughs passed the lips of the attenders. Smiles. Handshakes. So sad. I feel the same way about deserted houses. I just don't understand how people can leave a once loved place. I know they must have their reasons. Thank you for this.

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  6. Lovely, evocative pictures and words. There is something so sad about a deserted church.

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