My father by trade was an ironworker and on the side he ran a welding business. The garage was his workshop. There he kept the usual oxy-acetylene gear, used when he was making wrought-iron railings. For certain jobs he relied on the arc welder. Whenever the lights in the house flickered we knew he was using it. The drain on power was enormous. To this day, whenever the lights dim during an electrical storm, I think of my father and his welding shop. I also think of “Blacksmith Shop” by Czesław Miłosz:
“I liked the bellows
operated by rope.
A hand or foot pedal – I
don’t remember which.
But that blowing, and the
blazing of the fire!
And a piece of iron in the
fire, held there by tongs,
Red, softened for the
anvil,
Beaten with a hammer, bent
into a horseshoe,
Thrown into a bucket of
water, sizzle, steam.
And horses hitched to be shod,
Tossing their manes; and
in the grass by the river
Plowshares, sledge
runners, harrows waiting for repair
At the entrance, my bare
feet on the dirt floor,
Here, gusts of heat; at my
back, white clouds.
I stare and stare. It
seems I was called for this:
To glorify things just
because they are.”
A complicated set of
memories and associations continues. As an American I think of Longfellow’s “The Village Blacksmith” (“the muscles of his brawny arms / Are strong as iron bands”). Like
my paternal grandparents, Miłosz, their younger contemporary, was born in
Poland and emigrated to the U.S. My grandfather, whom I never met, was also an
ironworker. I met a working blacksmith for the first time in 1998 at the
Farmers’ Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y., and spent an hour talking to the smithy
as he made horseshoes. I already knew the Miłosz poem and remembered it while
we talked. The concluding lines I have memorized: “It seems I was called for
this: / To glorify things just because they are.” I can’t think of a more
worthy calling – expressing a sense of gratitude for existence.
In “What the New Atheists
Don’t See” (Not with a Bang but a Whimper, 2008), Theodore Dalrymple
writes:
“If you empty the world of
purpose, make it one of brute fact alone, you empty it (for many people, at any
rate) of reasons for gratitude, and a sense of gratitude is necessary for both
happiness and decency. For what can soon, and all too easily, replace gratitude
is a sense of entitlement. Without gratitude, it is hard to appreciate, or be
satisfied with, what you have: and life will become an existential shopping
spree that no product satisfies.”
[“Blacksmith Shop” was
translated from the Polish by Miłosz and Robert Hass and published in Provinces
(1991). Miłosz was born on this date, June 30, in 1911, and died in 2004 at age
ninety-four.]
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