Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Tongue Kissing - paved with good intentions

Source: http://www.killingthebuddha.com

Tongue Kissing

 

Getting close to God by loving the leavings of those who loved Him.

by Peter Manseau  
 

Every story about devotion is a story about waiting. When the devotion in question involves relics -- those bits and pieces of saints the faithful have worshipped as long as saints have been dying -- it usually is a story about waiting a very long time.

Before I saw my first relic, I stood at the end of a line of pilgrims wrapped around the altar of an Umbrian basilica, down the aisle between the wall and the pews, under the tableaux of a half-relief stations of the cross carved in wood. Each of the stations' fourteen squares depicted a scene from the crucifixion as large and menacing as a horror movie poster, but no one paid them much attention. Everyone was too busy waiting. The single-file crowd checked their watches, folded pages in their guidebooks, laughed and grumbled and planned in a dozen languages.

In front of me, a young mother with dyed black hair and a matching biker jacket watched her toddling son clap his palms on the polished floor and then warned him in German – "behuren Sie sich nicht!"Don't touch that! – each time he wandered into questionable territory. The boy had blond hair and spitty wet fingers and was eyeing a dried piece of gum stuck to one of the basilica's marble columns. Both column and gum seemed to have been there for an eternity, and when the boy pinched the gray wad his mother hissed – Horst! Nicht! – as if its removal would bring the whole place tumbling down.

The line shuffled forward and little Horst fell in behind his parents, tucking his face into the back of his father's knees. Latching on with one hand to a fold of green denim, reinserting the other in his mouth for safekeeping, he let his feet drag on the ground to show how bored he was with all of this. He seemed to be about two, probably at the tail end of his oral fixation phase, and I wondered if his parents had tried to explain why it was they had brought him to this dark church in the middle of a lovely summer day. Had he been able to understand what he was waiting for, he might have been more excited.

At the end of this queue, which stretched from the entrance a hundred yards behind us to some point beyond where we could see, there was said to be a very special tongue. A human tongue from a human head. A tongue that was believed to have the power to give speech the to dumb and eloquence to the tongue-tied. A tongue so potent, legend and guidebooks proclaim, that it was found whole, pink, and healthy after the body it had spoken for had gone to dust.

It was not just any tongue, of course, but La lingua del Santo – the "Tongue of the Saint." In the ancient city of Padua, two hundred miles or so north of Rome, "the Saint" refers always and only to Saint Anthony, whose basilica this was. Saint Anthony is the patron saint of lost objects needing to be found. All of us, a thousand tourists on any given day, were there to see what was left of him.

Behind me in line, a middle-aged Italian opened his eyes wide whenever I glanced in his direction. Each time our gazes crossed, the two sides of his bushy brow arced and separated like a drawbridge being raised. With his puffy lips and sagging jowl, he looked to me -- uncharitably, I admit -- like a man trawling for anonymous sex. When finally he spoke I was not entirely relieved of this suspicion.

"For the tongue you come, eh?"

"Excuse me?"

He looked at me with a wounded expression, as if hurt by my lack of understanding. 

"Sorry, my English, it is—" He didn't finish the thought. Instead he clarified, "Saint Anthony, yes? You are here to see him? You like the Saint?"

"Oh. Yes," I said, "though I don't know much about him."

"Ah!" The Italian grinned like a lottery winner, his confidence restored by the fact that, as far as he was concerned, it was not his English that was the problem; I was merely ignorant. "I know!" he cheered. "I know! All the stories of Il Santo, I know."

From somewhere behind him, a pilgrim made a pssst noise and others clucked in agreement, raising and pointing their chins in a gesture meant to urge us on. I turned to see that the line had moved forward again. There was now ten feet of empty floor between the German family and me. I put my hand in the air as apology to the waiting throng and half-jogged to close the gap.  

In the moment it took for him to rejoin me, the Italian had transformed himself from a possible sex-fiend into a combination tour guide and Borscht Belt comedian. "All the stories I know," he repeated. "Have you heard the one of the saint and the fishes?"

Before I could say I hadn't, he was off, launching into an excited monologue that brought beads of sweat to his drawbridge brow.

"They say, once, Saint Anthony, he was at the seaside. And the unbelievers tell him, Anthony you are no good and your God also, no good! And he say, If you don't hear me I will give my back to you and tell my sermon to the fish. Because the fish they will have better understanding. And Anthony, he says out loud: Fish! You are good because God make you good. You eat all you want, never work. You have the ocean to live in and never worry. Good! Good!

"When the fish they hear this they all swim in close and jump out of the water to listen. Anthony says to the unbelievers, See?

"You understand, yes? It is because of the tongue!" He pointed ahead, toward a place in the basilica where the queue turned a corner and disappeared out of sight. "This tongue!" 

We all ambled forward a few feet more. The Italian touched my arm and I took long steps to try to shake him. I kept my eye on the opposite wall, as if something had suddenly caught my attention. It was only by chance that I looked down and saw Horst stretched out on the floor. His mother glanced back then and hoisted him up by his belt, apologizing with her eyes.

"They say," the Italian continued, "when Anthony hear confessions one day a man come and tell him, Santo, I have kicked my mother! And Anthony say, Any foot that would kick the mother who made it should be cut off! Saint Anthony tell him more but these words the man cannot forget. When he leave the church, you know what he do? He run home, cut his foot!"

"On the road?"

"Comé?"

"Did he cut his foot on the road?" I asked slowly. "On the way home?"

"No!" The Italian made a sawing motion, rubbing the edge of his right hand across his left wrist. "Cut! FFFTTT! Off!

"When Anthony hear what happened, he feel awful, because he know, people believe his words. Whatever he say, they do. The power of the tongue, eh? So he go to the man, put his foot back on." He pressed his hands together like he praying and then worked his palms back and forth as if grinding something between them. "Like that. And the man, he can walk. He learn his lesson. Never kick his mother again."

The pilgrims lurched forward, around a bend now, and I followed the Germans into a narrow passage behind the altar. Five yards ahead, the line changed from relative order to a small-scale mob. Some stopped and turned to the left to take a long look while others forced their way through the traffic of bodies, impatient to move on now that the waiting was done. I couldn't yet see what was causing the commotion, but it was impossible to miss the lightning storm of camera flashes blinking off the walls, despite the repeated warnings we'd all received against photographic desecration.

At least they wanted only pictures. Back in the heyday of the veneration of relics, religious authorities had to keep constant guard over the sacred remains they displayed. A story is told of an English bishop who, while on pilgrimage in France, toured a monastery that had a shrine containing the full skeleton of Mary Magdalene. Impressing the monks with his piety, the bishop stooped to put his lips on the holy lady's hand. No one noticed that by the end of his kiss, he had bitten off a piece of her finger. He held it in his mouth for the rest of the tour, then returned to England to build a shrine of his own.    

So it's no surprise the basilica guards seemed content to let the tongue photos slide. Not that they could have done much about it. The number and speed of the flashes in the passageway suggested that the crowd of Australians, Koreans, and Americans (and at least six other nationalities I could count) were intent on spending their time in Padua as paparazzi of the dead.

In the middle of the hubbub a family of pilgrims dipped to their knees in front of the entrance to a small chapel, which I could now see was to blame for the gridlock.

"La Capella delle Reliquie," the Italian whispered. From others in line I heard it spoken of in French and Spanish as LaChapelle des Reliques, and LaCapila de la Reliquies, The Chapel of the Relics, but a sign in English identified it somewhat more bluntly as The Treasury. It contained not only St Anthony's tongue but his jawbone and a small piece of cartilage believed to be his larynx.

The kneeling family had been mostly silent through the forty minutes I'd been in line, so I couldn't guess their nationality, but their manner and dress suggested they were some variety of Europeans. When they rose, they crossed themselves with the absentminded ease of Crusaders' distant kin. Wherever they were from in what remains of Christendom, this was their own indigenous weirdness, unchanged for a thousand years.      

The Germans fought their way through the throng, and the Italian and I followed close behind, moving easily through the wake created by the stroller the father pushed before him. When the mother reached the reliquary, her mouth dropped slack. She called out to her son, "Horst! Sehen Sie? Eine Zunge!"

But Horst didn't seem to hear her. He turned and ran into the crowd, disappearing among the tourists' legs as their cameras flashed like a strobe. When his mother raced to catch him, it was finally my turn to approach the tongue.

Reaching the pedestal on which it stood, I was surprised to see that the reliquary looked like nothing so much as a model lighthouse: a thin tall stanchion supporting a glass cylinder, though in this case the cylinder contained not a lantern but a cone-shaped scrap of human flesh. As the story goes, at the time of its discovery in the saint's tomb eight hundred years before, the tongue had been so moist and plump it looked ready to deliver a sermon all on its own, lack of teeth or brain or lips be damned.  Now though the ornamentation of the gold around it seemed more appropriate for the Hope Diamond than for the chewed piece of licorice the tongue had come to resemble. The pedestal was spotted with fingerprints, and more than a few pilgrims went so far as to stand on their toes to plant kisses directly on the marble around the reliquary's base. Centuries of such contact had added a greasy bit of color to the gray stone, a soft pink mix of lipstick, finger oil, and spit, evidence that as many people as there were smudges had stood on this spot and tried to make contact with Il Santo, and through him, with God.

I put my fingers to my mouth and then as close to the relic as I could reach. The stone was cold to the touch but slightly slick, like a sweating beer bottle on a summer day. As I drew my hand back, I felt hot breath on my neck and then heard the voice of my self-appointed tour guide, anxious to leave me with one last story. 

"They say," he whispered, "when Saint Anthony preach outside, it never rain. Even the clouds, they stop to listen. Because of la lingua," he stressed. "The tongue! Pray to it to find words when you need them."

I thanked him for all he'd told me and then hurried toward the exit. On the way out, I saw little lost Horst out of the corner of my eye.  He had wandered alone into the corner of the chapel and now stood puzzling over what all the fuss was about. One hand down his pants, the other up his nose, he looked on the mass of adults crowding the holy tongue like he was the only one with his priorities straight.

Peter Manseau is editor of Killing the Buddha. He is the author most recently of Vows: The Story of a Priest, a Nun, and their Son.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Is God Logical?

Apologetics is all what I was fascinated as I read between lines of the apologetics. The goodness lies here http://www.truthnet.org/Christianity/Apologetics/Godlogical3/ . To list a few of metaphorical senses explore the world of DNA, God, Logical, evidence, Truth, Hume, Bible, Einstein, Theory of Relativity, Design argument, teleological, first cause, Behe at the link. I am sure you will enjoy. The extract from the same is as:

When we examine the issue of moral relativity, we arrive at door or of truth. The whole issue of morality is based on the source and reality of truth.  What is truth?  If truth is subjective then morality is subjective. If truth is objective then there are moral absolutes. Subjective truth, truth is subject to the possessor is illogical.  Objective truth, the objective correspondence of what is real, corresponding to reality.  What is source for this reality, for this truth? We know we exist, and we are aware of our existence.   Because we can see children being born and ourselves getting older, it is logical to conclude there is a beginning, "A Cause", to our existence.  We can also observe the same in the animal world.  Animals are born and die; they too must have a starting point of existence.   The necessity for a cause leads us to another "First Principle" the need for cause;

The principle of causality: Only being can cause being. Nothing does not exist, and only what exists can cause existence, since the concept of "Cause" implies an existing thing that has the power to effect another. From absolutely nothing comes absolutely nothing.

Every thing that comes to be must have a cause.  If you take a candle and light it, it will burn for a limited amount of time until its potential energy is burned.  The heat, the candle emits is similar to the heat the sun emits. The fact that the candle's energy source is finite demonstrates the need for cause.  There was a cause for the candle and their will be an end to the candle. The heat emitted from the Sun is contingent (dependent) on the finite (limited) energy contained in the Sun.

This demonstrates the Sun is also finite, there was, a cause, for the Sun to exist.  This same principle is out throughout the whole universe.  The farthest galaxies emitting finite energy have a point they were turned on, "A cause" for their existence.

Sir Francis Bacon (1561-1626) the father of modern science said, "True knowledge is knowledge by causes." If the Universe is finite and had a beginning, then it would need to have a cause—if causality is a valid principle. A flaw in the causality principle would be equivalent to having a fatal crack in the foundation of science.   David Hume, (1711-1776) the skeptic admitted, it is absurd to deny the principle of cause.

Destiny : The World Changers creed

 
The World Changers creed

The Dream : the sense of grandeur towards life
The Vision
: the depth capacity and measurable impact of a dream
The Commitment
: the acceptance of pain as a cost towards a benefit
The Goal
: the dedication think, plan meditate and learn
The mission
: The purity, forbearance and fearlessness of character
The destiny
: The imperative to exchange a life for a moral cause that will endure

AIM : Awareness Intelligently maneuvered

 Improve your aim
 Your self–esteem is the key to your personality
 Recognize that knowledge and skill are the keys to financial freedom
 The more you learn, the more you earn.

Undefined Relation: A Heart-Hole Reality

Undefined Relation: A Heart-Hole Reality

I am compelled to give it a name but predefined assumptions came true. A hole that persists in your belief, I think, is the most crucial love factor to hate the complimentary alien. When you can rule apathy as long as you are ruled by it, you can see the orientation of your so-called spirit lying down the earth to take its flying over off. Oops! Reality, it sounds so strange that mannerly odor of sensations kills your 'born-not-to-expose' possessions. You commence only those heartstring vibrations imposing around your imagination.

It's really difficult to put out the stuff which you were trying, trying to be one of yours. Relations are said to exhibit nightmare. But what if they themselves are undefined? Created-to-kill or made-to-fade-away waves of unbound relations are those uncontrollable superscripts that hang around till you meet something dark called the death. But I am occupied, I know I must die, let me die with my feelings, my obsessions and also with something which impulse such relation. This is the real world, a Pandora's Box, a scenario roaming around a huge sea and a monster a head. This is a heart-hole reality my friend. This is not a word or two. This is invisibility, yes, and perfect invisibility of rendered to operate heart.

That's right! The existence of non-relation! But still exists. Lingered and penetrated brain nerves around oasis of mere true predefined factualities. The reason is obvious we are bound to face but let us live happily so that we are encapsulated by perch of hormonal response on this earthy relation. Ask for nothing but goods are on their way to you if you are good. Let me keep safe of my belief that YOU exists for me!

No music is a bad music. Let us not unbound or try to define such heart-hole realities time and again. Simply, they come and stay alive with us always to keep us intact. See YOU soon!!!

 

November 22, 2006

NB: My very first expression after being loved!

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Despondency

 

Yes, I confess I am not absolute. I am off the hope now. Dreaming has become a tale of woe because simply what you dream or plan never, never in this fraudulent life has come up true to any extent. So nightmares are illusions so as mysteries of life.

 

Feelings down and you are up, any meaning but the sense of clarification does not make up the face. Suffice world of absoluteness has completely invaded me and nothing remain far apart to work out for the situation or more precisely the panic boredom.

 

Monolithic plans are not those I am formulating but to be a simple man at least a man of sense I need to follow my own propaganda but everything goes wrong. I am no more a man now, no thoughts that think or function anymore. I am dying for words.

 

He slipped through all the grades of despondency until he reached a bottom of absolute gloom. I am not Ekendra, I am not true, I am dying, I don't want to be Ekendra anymore, till I wake up thinking any bad ideas to lead my world to the thorns of cacti implanted at my heart!

 

This article is just an oxymoron draft of my a little life work, please check periodically for more info, www.EkendraLamsal.com!

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

"Dreams and Destiny" in the spirit blog

v  Imagination is the beginning of creation.

v  Eat healthy, Live better

v  Don't get into the Rat Race

v  Keep on working even of upset

v  Leaders are different from average people in that they have vision

v  Trust your heart to lead the way

v  Managing your time

v  Setting reachable goals

v  Presenting a professional image

v  Getting ahead in your career

v  Leading effectively

v  Success through positive thinking

v  One of the symptoms of fear is worry

v  Attitude is everything

v  Create your own future

v  Your mind is your most productive tools

v  The faster/more you move, the more energy you get

v  The faster you move, the more experience you get

v  The faster you move, the more ground you cover, the more people you see

v  Think big expand your horizons

v  Start thinking like s winner

v  Knowledge is power

v  Knowledge is the key to wealth

v  People get paid for their knowledge

v  Belief: the power that moves the world

v  Preparation kills fear

v  Ego kill teamwork

v  Quality thoughts produce a quality life

v  The quality of your life is directly related to the quality of your thought.

v  Personal growth requires that we continually learn new things. The person who does not learn or push the boundaries of the knowledge will go back wards.

v  Getting and Giving is the essence of all learning

v  Impossibility thinkers focus on making a living. Possibility thinker focus on making a life.

v  Reality is created by the mind. We can change our reality by changing our mind.

v  A peaceful mind generates power

v  You can not build a strong team on weak individuals

v  Winners see what they want to happen, Losers see what they fear might happen

v  The quality of your life is related to the quality of your thought.

v  The greatest power in the world is inside your head. It's called the subconscious mind

v  The two most important words in achieving success are focus and concentration

v  Develop a positive mental attitude

v   95% of all people are trapped in the Rat Race

v  Build a TEAM, Build a Future

v  Opportunity will appear when you ready

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Destiny : The World Changers creed

The World Changers creed

The Dream : the sense of grandeur towards life
The Vision : the depth capacity and measurable impact of a dream
The Commitment: the acceptance of pain as a cost towards a benefit
The Goal : the dedication think, plan meditate and learn
The mission : The purity, forbearance and fearlessness of character
The destiny : The imperative to exchange a life for a moral cause that will endure

AIM : Awareness Intelligently maneuvered

> Improve your aim
> Your self–esteem is the key to your personality
> Recognize that knowledge and skill are the keys to financial freedom
> The more you learn, the more you earn.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

We cannot Rise Ourselves By Searching Outside

We cannot Rise Ourselves By Searching Outside

- Mahatma Gandhi

 

·  However loft the ambition; it should embrace within its ambit even those considered the lowliest of creatures.

·  We cannot raise ourselves by searching outside. The scope for growth lies within.

·  Whenever I see an erring man, I say to myself I have also erred; when I see a lustful man I say to myself, so was I once; and in this way I feel kinship with everyone in the world and feel that I cannot be happy without the humblest of us being happy.

·  Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.

·  An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody will see it.

·  As soon as we lose the moral basis, we cease to be religious. There is no such thing as religion over-riding morality. Man, for instance, cannot be truthful, cruel or incontinent and claim to have God on his side.

·  Not everyone is destined to acquire material knowledge. But all can acquire spiritual knowledge; it is their duty to do so.

·  It is strange that we should exert ourselves so much over the externals, and not pay even a thought to what lies within.

·  Everyone who wills can hear the inner voice. It is within everyone.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Reserved Optimist

As long as humans exist, new theories will continually be propounded. But the most opf those, sadly, will only serve to confound our already much-addled brains.

 

It seems to me that we focus on negatives in our lives with such fervency that the rare sprouts of happiness rarely survive the hullabaloos of desperation. Yes! My life is dogged with unprecedented boredom I have never known before, and it often is very difficult for me to go on. Each day seems like an eternal existential struggle, with nothing but tenuous threads of optimism to cling to.

 

Nothing new. The same old room, the same odds and ends sprawled everywhere, the same old radio tunes,, the same old dithering mind, now slap-happy, now pulling my sprits down with pathetic thoughts. And so my days begin, as they always will, in a similar vein.

Without God The Universe is Empty

Without God The Universe is Empty

- Great Poet Laxmi P Devkota

 

Without God the universe is empty. There is no action without cause. We adapt a life with the belief of "He is". Even seeing the shapes and base of the universe if one says the ruling of the sentimental superman is not seen is like blindness. There's up and down in every place but there's the combination of molecules, the great stationary motion of the stars; but not the conflict, the meaningful business is going on in time and in place; and the sun and the moon work with accurately polity. Trees are kept inside the seeds, and seeds are inside the trees. There is the world inside the seed and the seeds inside the world. This relation, this balance, this minute weight, these wheels, these proper series all tell us- heavenly sentiment is not imagination but truth of the universe.

PS: Remember that Devkota was the fervent atheist.

 

Friday, November 10, 2006

Be The Real Optimistic

Be The Real Optimistic:

Be optimistic in the true sense. If one doesn't work hard and wants to get good result, certainly then his optimism is not real optimism. This type of optimism is based on sentimentality and carries no force behind it. Pessimistic looks at the dark side of a thing while an optimistic at the bright point. For a simple example, take a glass half full of water. You may say that it is half empty you are a pessimist and half full you are an optimist.

 

To be the real optimistic, check the habit of looking at things negatively and take it as natural phenomena. Though the situation is not easy, if you face the thing properly and minutely it will reveal strength within you.

 

To be the real optimistic, you must perform self effort and you must prepare yourself for every situation. It will give a divine faith within your hearth and every action will go well in a long run. If you do anything with wrong concept of optimism, your heart will always be telling you that your optimism is wrong. So to be optimistic, you must be backed up by faith.

 

If you are an optimistic, you will shine brighter and brighter continuously but the pessimistic wherever goes faces a darker situations and becomes more miserable. So be the real optimistic in your daily life that will generate a Devine energy within yourself and your personality will certainly increase to majestic heights.

Wish you a bright future whether you are an optimistic or a pessimistic, it's you who are to lead your life to the fullest.

 

Note that: All these words are against the mainframe zion of this blog, however the contain is something that relates in a way or the other with the explicit funda besides the moron's world blog.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Mistaken Memories

I was overwhelmed. I was a free bird. I kissed the sun, topped the world. But all of a sudden he delayed pleasantly I was still a human. I never thought a human could ever so happy. The owl on the terrace pretended to me as if he was the whole world. He was in fact a perfecto cloud-nine figure I could ever imagine. I decided to befriend as with heartstring welcome of peeped eyes he pronounced me for.

Caring me, daring me and after all me at all. I did greet him too. So was the relation configuring. The very next morning, he woke me with a gentle touch on my temple; I wished I had everything on him. The mosaic schedule of my life was organized. I never know I was right or wrong, he taught me the real fantasy over veracity, I learnt few on his part and am sure he did well. The worst form of life (if this stage is inevitable) is to make a real promise. Was that all I had to know?

Simplified and optimized path of my life was at the forefront and I welcomed every single moment that cares whatever they fabricated on him. I'm sure the angel's knowhow got better friend on my part than I did on him, guess. Or is this more pragmatic? I was ahead and he was the supremo. Yes, my magic did work and reality was not necessarily fabricated.

Slowly but consciously, I was careful not to crime with time and again in my life but is this all what I did on the poor owl's part or shall I be a heavenly icon that's intervened in the shell of a window. Night, the next day, was so dark as if all the stars were dead. The fallacy could never rule. Dazzling were the kings. Window pans got closed which was never a fact, I woke up late in the morning with the darkening sun to find boulevard of my wrecked twigs and poorly lying below the Christmas tree was my dear owl. I'm still confused was I wrong? Or did I betray him? But I comprehend now that I am still in love- a part on him. May the god pass on my feelings to him?

Happy Friendship Day!

August 06, 2006

written by: Ekendra Lamsal

Saturday, October 21, 2006

There Will Come Soft Rains

There Will Come Soft Rains

 

In the living room the voice-clock sang, Tick-tock, seven o'clock, time to get up, time to get up, seven  o'clock! as if it were afraid nobody would. The morning house lay empty. The clock ticked on, repeating and repeating its sounds into the emptiness. Seven-nine, breakfast time, seven-nine! In the kitchen the breakfast stove gave a hissing sigh and ejected from its warm interior eight pieces of perfectly browned toast, eight eggs sunnyside up, sixteen slices of bacon, two coffees, and two cool glasses of milk. "Today is August 4, 2026," said a second voice from the kitchen ceiling., "in the city of Allendale, California." It repeated the date three times for memory's sake. "Today is Mr. Featherstone's birthday. Today is the anniversary of Tilita's marriage. Insurance is payable, as are the water, gas, and light bills." Somewhere in the walls, relays clicked, memory tapes glided under electric eyes.


 

Eight-one, tick-tock, eight-one o'clock, off to school, off to work, run, run, eight-one! But no doors slammed, no carpets took the soft tread of rubber heels. It was raining outside. The weather box on the fron door sang quietly: "Rain, rain, go away; rubbers, raincoats for today..." And the rain tapped on the empty house, echoing.

Outside, the garage chimed and lifted its door to reveal the waiting car. After a long wait the door swung down again.

At eight-thirty the eggs were shriveled and the toast was like stone. An aluminum wedge scraped them down a metal throat which digested and flushed them away to the distant sea. The dirty dishes were dropped into a hot washer and emerged twinkling dry.

 

Nine-fifteen, sang the clock, time to clean.

Out of warrens in the wall, tiny robot mice darted. The rooms were acrawl with the small cleaning animals, all rubber and metal. They thudded against chairs, whirling their mustached runners, kneading the rug nap, sucking gently at hidden dust.

 

Then, like mysterious invaders, they popped into their burrows. Their pink electric eye faded. The house was clean.

 

Ten o'clock. The sun came out from behind the rain. The house stood alone in a city of rubble and ashes. This was the one house left standing. At night the ruined city gave of a radioactive glow which could be seen for miles.

Ten-fifteen. The garden sprinklers whirled up in golden founts, filling the soft morning air with scatterings of brightness. The water pelted indowpanes, running down the charred west side where the house had been burned evenly free of its white paint. The entire west face of the house was black, save for five places. Here the silhouette in paint of a man mowing a lawn. Here, as in a photograph, a woman bent to pick flowers. Still farther over, their images burned on wood in one titantic instant, a small boy, hands flung into the air; higher up, the image of thrown ball, and opposite him a girl, hand raised to catch a ball which never came down.

The five spots of paint- the man, the woman, the children, the ball- remained. The rest was a thin charcoaled layer.

The gentle sprinkler rain filled the garden with falling light.

Until this day, how well the house had kept its peace. How carefully it had inquired, 'Who goes there? What's the password?" and, getting no answer from the onely foxes and whining cats, it had shut up its windows and drawn shades in an old-maidenly preoccupation with self-protection which bordered on a mechanical paranoia.

 

It quivered at each sound, the house did. If a sparrow brushed a window, the shade snapped up. The bird, startled, flew off! No, not even a bird must touch the house!

 

The house was an altar with ten thousand attendents, big, small, servicing, attending, in choirs. But the gods had gone away, and the ritual of the religion continued senslessly, uselessly.

Twelve noon. A dog whined, shivering, on the front porch. The front door recognized the dog voice and opened. The dog, once large and fleshy, but now gone to bone and covered with sores, moved in and through the house, tracking mud. Behind it whirred angry mice, angry at having to pick up mud, angry at inconvenience.

 

For not a leaf fragment blew under the door but what the wall panels flipped open and the copper scrap rats flashed swiftly out. The offending dust, hair, or paper, seized in miniature steel jaws, was raced back to the burrows. There, down tubes which fed into the cellar, it was dropped like evil Baal in a dark corner.

The dog ran upstairs, hysterically yelping to each door, at last realizing, as the house realized, that only silence was here.

It sniffed the air and scratched the kitchen door. Behind the door, the stove was making pancakes which filled the house with a rich odor and the scent of maple syrup.

 

The dog frothed at the mouth, lying at the door, sniffing, its eyes turned to fire. It ran wildly in circles, biting at its tail, spun in a frenzy, and died. It lay in the parlor for an hour Two 'clock, sang a voice.

 

Delicately sensing decay at last, the regiments of mice hummed out as softly as blown gray leaves in an electrical wind.

 

Two-fifteen.

The dog was gone.

In the cellar, the incinerator glowed suddenly and a whirl of sparks leaped up the chimney.

Two thirty-five.

Bridge tables sprouted from patio walls. Playing cards fluttered onto pads in a shower of pips. Martinis manifested on an oaken bench with egg salad sandwiches. Music played.

But the tables were silent and the cards untouched.

At four o'clock the tables folded like great butterflies back through the paneled walls.

 

Four-thirty.

The nursery walls glowed.

Animals took shape: yellow giraffes, blue lions, pink antelopes, lilac panthers cavorting in crystal substance. The walls were glass. They looked out upon color and fantasy. Hidden films clocked though the well-oiled sprockets, and the walls lived. The nursery floor was woven to resemble a crisp cereal meadow. Over this ran aluminum roaches and iron crickets, and in the hot still air butterflies of delicate red

tissue wavered among the sharp aroma of animal spoors! There was the sound like a great matted yellow hive of bees within a dark bellows, the lazy bumble of a purring lion. And there was the patter of okapi feet and the murmur of a fresh jungle rain, like other hoofs falling upon the summer-starched grass. Now the walls dissolved into distances of parched weed, mile on mile, and warm endless sky. The animals drew away into thorn brakes and water holes.

It was the children's hour.

Five o'clock. The bath filled with clear hot water.

Six, seven, eight o'clock. The dinner dishes manipulated like magic tricks, and in the study a click. In the metal stand opposite the hearth where a fire now blazed up warmly, a cigar popped out, half an inch of soft gray ash on it, smoking, waiting.

Nine o'clock. The beds warmed their hidden circuits, for nights were cool here. Nine-five. A voice spoke from the study ceiling: "Mrs. McClellan, which poem would you

like this evening?" The house was silent. The voice said at last, "Since you express

no preference, I shall select a poem at random." Quiet music rose to back the voice. "Sara Teasdale. As I recall, your favorite...

"There will come soft rains and the smell of the ground, And swallows circling with their shimmering sound;

And frogs in the pools singing at night, And wild plum trees in tremulous white;

Robins will wear their feathery fire,Whistling their whims on a low fence-wire;

And not one will know of the war, not one Will care at last when it is done.

Not one would mind, neither bird nor tree, If mankind perished utterly;

And Spring herself, when she woke at dawn Would scarcely know that we

 

 

were gone."

The fire burned on the stone hearth and the cigar fell away into a mound of quiet ash on its tray. The empty chairs faced each other between the silent walls, and the music played

At ten o'clock the house began to die.

 

The wind blew. A falling tree bough crashed through the kitchen window. Cleaning solvent, bottled, shattered over the stove. The room was ablaze in an instant!

"Fire!" screamed a voice. The house lights flashed, water pumps shot water from the ceilings. But the solvent spread on the linoleum, licking, eating, under the kitchen door, while the voices took it up in chorus: "Fire, fire, fire!"

The house tried to save itself. Doors sprang tightly shut, but the windows were broken by the heat and the wind blew and sucked upon the fire.

The house gave ground as the fire in ten billion angry sparks moved with flaming ease from room to room and then up the stairs. While scurrying water rats squeaked from the walls, pistoled their water, and ran for more. And the wall sprays let down showers of mechanical rain.

But too late. Somewhere, sighing, a pump shrugged to a stop. The quenching rain ceased. The reserve water supply which filled the baths and washed the dishes for many quiet days was gone.

The fire crackled up the stairs. It fed upon Picassos and Matisses in the upper halls, like delicacies, baking off the oily flesh, tenderly crisping the canvases into black shavings.

Now the fire lay in beds, stood in windows, changed the colors of drapes!

And then, reinforcements.

From attic trapdoors, blind robot faces peered down with faucet mouths gushing green chemical.

The fire backed off, as even an elephant must at the sight of a dead snake. Now there were twenty snakes whipping over the floor, killing the fire with a clear cold venom of green froth.

But the fire was clever. It had sent flames outside the house, up through the attic to the pumps there. An explosion! The attic brain which directed the pumps was shattered into bronzeshrapnel on the beams.

The fire rushed back into every closet and felt of the clothes that hung there.

The house shuddered, oak bone on bone, its bared skeleton cringing from the heat, its wire, its nerves revealed as if a surgeon had torn the skin off to let the red veins and capillaries quiver in the scalded air. Help, help! Fire! Run, run! Heat snapped mirrors like the first brittle winter ice. And the voices wailed Fire, fire, run, run, like a tragic nursery rhyme, a dozen voices, high, low, like children dying in a forest, alone, alone. And the voices fading as the wires popped their sheathings like hot chestnuts. One, two, three, four, five voices died.

In the nursery the jungle burned. Blue lions roared, purple giraffes bounded off. The panthers ran in circles, changing color, and ten million animals, running before the fire, vanished off toward a distant steaming river...

Ten more voices died. In the last instant under the fire avalanche, other choruses, oblivious, could be heard announcing th etime, playing music, cutting the lawn by remote-control mower, or setting an umbrella franctically out and in the slamming and opening front door, a thousand things happening, like a clock shop when each clock strikes the hour insanely before or after the other, a scene of maniac confusion, yet unity; singing, screaming, a few last cleaning mice darting bravely out to carry the horrid ashes away! And one voice, with sublime disregard for the situation, read poetry aloud all in the fiery study, until all the film spools burned, until all the wires withered and the circuits cracked.

 

The fire burst the house and let it slam flat down, puffing out skirts of spark and smoke.

 

In the kitchen, an instant before the rain of fire and timber, the stove could be seen making breakfasts at a psychopathic rate, ten dozen eggs, six loaves of toast, twenty dozen bacon strips, which , eaten by fire, started the stove working again,hysterically hissing!

 

The crash. The attic smashing into the kitchen and parlor. The parlor into cellar, cellar into sub-cellar. Deep freeze, armchair, film tapes, circuits, beds, and all like skeletons thrown in a cluttered mound deep under.

Smoke and silence. A great quantity of smoke.

 

Dawn showed faintly in the east. Among the ruins, one wall stood alone. Within the wall, a last voice said, over and over again and again, even as the sun rose to shine upon the heaper rubble and steam:

 

"Today is August 5, 2026, today is August 5, 2026, today is..."

 

Disclaimer to all the readers: This interpretation of the message behind There Will Come Soft Rains Elisabeth Adam' s page entitled The End.

I found this extremely innovating to read and realize, and for that I posted on this blog www.i-geek.blogspot.com. If You think of any complains, suggestions, or anything related to this story and the blog, just comment me or drop message at gearshifts@gmail.com.

At the last  repeat I have not written this theme. Please, be content with the contains.