Monday, November 7, 2022

Another Snippet

 



Another quote from Robertson Davies that caught my attention:

“One of my favorite cultural fossils,” said he, “is the

 garden gnome. You have observed them? Very cute objects, very cute indeed. But do people want them simply, for cuteness? I don’t believe it. The gnomes provide some of that sugar in the drink of belief that Western religion no longer offers, and which the watered-down humanitarianism that passes with so many people for religion offers even less. The gnomes speak of a longing, unrecognized but all the stronger for its invisibility, for the garden-god, the image of the earth-spirit, the kobold, the kabir, the guardian of the household. Dreadful as they are, they have a truth you won’t find in the bird-bath or the sun-dial.”

                                                    

We don't have garden gnomes, but my mother-in-law (not a Catholic nor even particularly religious) had a little statue of St. Fiacre (or St. Focaro, as she called him.) And numerous folks have statues of St, Francis in their gardens. A similar impulse?



6 comments:

Sandra Parshall said...

Garden gnomes can be irresistible. We have plenty of real wild animals roaming our yard, but we have a little fox and a rabbit and a couple of frogs sitting in the garden. (Real foxes, in particular, are in our garden all the time.) Seems a little silly, but I saw each one at some point and bought it on impulse, and they still please me.

Vicki Lane said...

I have a small concrete pig and a little naked child (my mother gave it to us almost fifty years ago because it looked like Ethan--curly hair. And, come to think of it, we have a gargoyle (another gift) nestled in a niche in one of our rock walls. I have long lusted after a certain tall leaden hare that I've seen in pictures of English gardens but, as I recall, when I looked for it, it was wildly expensive.

Vicki Lane said...

Oh, and the two metal cranes that adorn our goldfish pool.

jennyfreckles said...

Each to their own, I guess. I'd never have a gnome but I might (if I was wealthy enough and had a big enough garden) invest in a tasteful sculpture.

GPearson said...

I found the sentence, "The gnomes provide some of that sugar in the drink of belief that Western Religion no longer offers,..." to be quite illuminating today.

Sandra Parshall said...

We used to have a glass reflecting ball in the garden, but eventually the raccoons knocked it over and broke it. Now we have a tall copper wind spinner that Amazon sent me by mistake and wouldn't let me return.