wayfaringwordhack: (web)
wayfaringwordhack ([personal profile] wayfaringwordhack) wrote2012-06-27 09:52 pm

Here By Glimpses Known

Pretty much in our backyard...

On the Basque coastline, La Pile D'Assiettes (the stack of plates), which is just two-minute walk from where I like to go to write:

la pile d'assiette - st jean de Luz - close up

  For a billion years the patient earth amassed documents and inscribed them with signs and pictures which lay unnoticed and unused. Today, at last, they are waking up, because man has come to rouse them. Stones have begun to speak, because an ear is there to hear them. Layers become history and, released from the enchanted sleep of eternity, life's motley, never-ending dance rises out of the black depths of the past into the light of the present. — Hans Cloos Conversation with the Earth (1954)

And in context:
la pile d'assiettes - st jean de luz

Gradually the sunken land begins to rise again, and falls perhaps again, and rises again after that, more and more gently each time, till as it were the panting earth, worn out with the fierce passions of her fiery youth, has sobbed herself to sleep once more, and this new world of man is made. — Charles Kingsley; 'Thoughts in a Gravel Pit', a lecture delivered at the Mechanics' Institute, Odiham (1857). The Works of Charles Kingsley (1880), 282. 

Quotations from TodayinSci

[identity profile] queenoftheskies.livejournal.com 2012-06-27 07:57 pm (UTC)(link)
That's beautiful. You're very lucky.

[identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com 2012-06-27 08:09 pm (UTC)(link)
The population density of the Basque coast is quite high, so it is lovely to have somewhere so wild and unspoiled to retreat to. :)