Douglas Fir
Douglas Fir Ken Howe It is easier to apprehend the sacredness(神圣) of the Douglas-Fir in the mountains, where it is more rare. Frequently alone in a meadow, surrounded by dropped fir cones(锥形体), needles bestrewing its pedestal, its dais. The Douglas-Fir can eschew(避免) standing in a fire which burns but does not consume when it interpellates a Charlton Heston or other zealot(狂热者). Its aloofness(冷漠,高傲) is its sufficient interpellative act, cleanly articulate in the thin alpine silence. The meadow is filled with this silence, Ukrainian dolls of it radiating from the tree, a choir of bumblebees in the goat-grazed grass: the tree the omega point of a labyrinth of columbine and saxifrage encompassing the entire valley and diagramming, in labelled SI units, each isobar of its beatitude(祝福). |