M. C. A. Hogarth ([info]haikujaguar) wrote,
@ 2007-05-30 15:10:00
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Entry tags:excerpts, the aphorisms of kherishdar, writing

The Aphorisms of Kherishdar: ISHAN
This one's early, because I really like it. It's also the first aphorism. And I thought of all of you who wanted to see the city more.

ISHAN
M.C.A. Hogarth

ishan [ ee SHAWN ], (noun) – appreciation of fullness of a thing's span, from its inception to its ending; implies that it is worthy at every moment of its existence, and acknowledges that it is different in the beginning from how it is at its peak and how it is at its end, and that this too is part of its worth.

      The honeyed light of early spring glowed on the cream stone of the library. I entered the round building through the great arch and into cool brown shadows and intimate spaces scented with paper and leather and ink, an incense headier than a temple's. Near the threshold I was greeted by a slim Ai-Naidari whose robes served to anchor him; he was old enough to seem ethereal, the thin velvet of his pelt worn almost to translucence.
      "Seeking inspiration, Calligrapher?" he asked in the grammar of caste-equals.
      Though we were both public servants, I bowed to him, in veneration for his wisdom and our long and enigmatic association. We had known one another from before my elevation to the public servant caste, when I found myself so drawn to the words and arts of other Ai-Naidar that I would make pilgrimages here from the country, where my family dwelt. "As always, Librarian."
      He studied me with pale lavender eyes and then laughed. "Go you to the insights of others, then."
      And so I lost myself in the shelves, in the scrolls and pages and parchments and maps, for to be a calligrapher is not solely to paint words beautifully, but also to choose beautiful words. I brought a stack to the garden in the center of the library, to the sunlight and the delicate flower buds and the benches and tables there. I read as the light blanched, until the shadows of the graceful arcs of the trees crossed my spine... and still, I wrote nothing in my notebook, no basis for a new aphorism, no new thought on what it was to be who we are.
      As I closed the last book, the Librarian took form from the light. "No food for the spirit, then?"
      I shook my head. "Not today."
      He smiled. "The day is young yet. The temple of Shemena is having a dance of veils and blossoms."
      I glanced at him.
      "I'll reshelve the books," he said.
      So I walked the gold streets of the capital to the temple of the Maiden in the burnished light of a spring afternoon, and there I found the priests dancing with the adolescents who would soon be adults. And I laughed at their delight, and let the priests coax me into spreading the flower petals, and learned something there surrounded in the gaiety of youth, just as I had in the library at the hands of the clear sight of age.
      I went back to my studio then in the blue light of evening; made a tea from tender leaves. I remembered the sight of the coral-colored petals strewn on the blond stone of the temple stairs, softer than new skin and yet already browning at the edges. And I found my pen in my hand.
      Wisdom begins in full living.


The Aphorisms Website.


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[info]tabard
2007-05-30 07:23 pm UTC (link)
Oh! I really like this one! It's amazing how you can make even the environment seem like a character in your writing. I love the use of different types and colors and lights. I can almost feel the sun's warmth on my back, and good, strong stone under my feet.

Thank you both (Calligrapher and Haikujaguar) for showing us a little bit of the city! It's as beautiful as its people!

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[info]puffbird
2007-05-30 07:39 pm UTC (link)
Very nice.

I love that the priests dance. :) It's as though in English "priest" and "dance" shouldn't be in the same sentence, but here it feels so natural.

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[info]artfulruin
2007-05-30 11:21 pm UTC (link)
This is completely off topic, but I wanted to alert you that the comments on your picture reel site have been spammed by a slew of viagra ads. Yeesh.

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[info]haikujaguar
2007-05-30 11:54 pm UTC (link)
Yes, I've been noticing those on and off for a few days... creepy and odd. Not sure what's going on with it. O_O

Thank you for pointing it out though!

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[info]quille
2007-05-31 01:49 am UTC (link)
Reading these stories has me looking at my pens and ink again, thinking that I really should use them soon. Thank you. :)

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[info]indigo_alamaris
2007-05-31 05:25 am UTC (link)
Ah, beautiful. :)

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The Perfection of a Parabola
[info]ysabetwordsmith
2007-05-31 06:08 am UTC (link)
This story makes me think of a parabola: it's not the peak that makes the shape important, but the whole arc of it, from one end over the top and down again. Birth, youth, maturity, age, and death. I too am charmed by the dance of the (presumably mature) priests with the adolescents.

Our culture has sadly lost most of its recognition of life's milestones. One thing I do a lot of, as a Pagan priestess and writer, is help people rediscover the thresholds that are important to them in their journey, and find ways to honor those in community.

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Re: The Perfection of a Parabola
[info]anamacha
2007-06-02 06:31 am UTC (link)
and how do you do that, as described in your last paragraph? I have been lost for some time, seeking inspiration, and the best I've been able to come up with is "let go and let it happen." This makes me feel lost.

I place you under no obligation to help me, I feel I should point out. I am merely a Seeker.

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Re: The Perfection of a Parabola
[info]ysabetwordsmith
2007-06-06 06:29 am UTC (link)
This is a good topic for discussion, so I made it into a full post on my own Journal.

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Re: The Perfection of a Parabola
[info]anamacha
2007-06-06 10:19 pm UTC (link)
thank you. *bow* I shall follow up shortly.

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