Love of Lines: Notes for an Apprentice Shingler Sara London The injuries are small ones, the blade(叶片,刀片) slips from the cedar(雪松) slat to the kneeling knee, or the plane slides off the shingle's edge and shaves the thumb knuckle(关节) . Splinters(碎片) are surprisingly rare, but when the hands are cold, the hammer glances the galvanized(镀锌的,电镀的) nail and slams the horny(角状的) one, pinching(箍紧,收缩) and blistering the pellicle(薄膜,薄皮) . This is the worst. What we labor over, a swayback(背部下凹的) beach house, rests on a rheumatic(风湿病的) wharf, our task to pluck the worn wood scales, add new bridgework, a shield of George Washington teeth, clamped against adversity(逆境,不幸) . We begin with the shingle(墙面板,木瓦) iron slipping it along the virgin backside of loose dentures(假牙) , and pull so shakes fly off in our faces, crack and splinter, the sharp dry notes narrating fifteen-plus years of weather. Like dog years, this is ancient beyond thinning and brittleness. Where we find rot, we chisel(雕,刻) out the grainy porridge(粥,糊) and fill the gap with new pine, thick wedges(楔形) for warmth. Wood chips in our eyes make us cry a little, but mostly we keep right on through the small disasters to batten down before nightfall, our eye on the suture— horizon stitching(缝合,固定) low grey sky to our dark Atlantic. Tar paper (or a new slick synthetic stock that doesn't rip and bears a name too New Age for song) is whack-stapled to weary ship-salvage boards, top layer always over bottom to keep rain water from seeping back to wood. Then the sweet new cedar shields we extract from fresh bundles and fit, side flush to side and hammer in twice, milk oozing from flat four-penny heads, the soft white fur of mold, like premature infant fuzz, rising from wet wood into the crisp autumn turn of air. Chalk lines are best when workers hold each end, one reaching to the center to snap, the blue powder mapping a million points along a line so straight the day's doubts are deleted in its sure direction. But a course of shingles followed by another and another parading up the house—these hands saluting, soles of tree, puerile(幼稚的,天真的) soldiers sweet as puberty(青春期,开花期) , pressed side to side so no one stands taller, though some are fatter, "hippos," and some are "weasel"- thin, their bodies set like brickwork so no two seams meet—all the bathos of the week is buried here. Lines link lines to what we love in these long hours, the wood wine of it, the weighted plunge(投入,跳进) and smack of hammer and nail, the hard grip, hammer handle to palm, the knock knock knock answering back from neighboring houses and street, wood and nail and wood, even the smeared(弄脏的) blood marking the rough facade. We swing and drum the day. * And when we finish, the lines, stacks of horizons, paths to an exacting place, meeting at trim and window, foundation and roof, are what we've made. Lines where cold, rain, wind, sleet, sun and snow end. Lines we step across the street to judge, and when they're fine they're fine, and when they fail they haunt. Order is easy to plan for, hard to achieve. This is what houses are about— planes that meet along degrees we trust. Lines that say, The weather is up to you. We unfasten our nail aprons(围裙,皮圈) as the sun sends its light into China's day. Toss into the toolbox tape measure, plane and knife, hammer, chalkline and coping saw, and head home to husband or girlfriend or dog, or house— house, bless it, though it doesn't save us from ourselves. And when we sleep, it is the sleep of lines well made, or lines that are not well, marginally mis-measured, but in our dreams slanting(倾斜的) earthward or rising toward some inevitable convergence, the confusion of infinite touch,#p#分页标题#e# and so we return like some floating angel to the house and remove by glance alone, five fresh courses to correct our quarter-inch mistake. When we wake, the error dissolves into morning, compulsion(强迫,强制) keeling into the undefined plane of day and its incorrigible(不可救药的,积习难改的) knots. In a year the high wheat of the wood will fade to blue-grey, the seams will open a crack, for the wood has dried and shrunk. The smell, once fecund(肥沃的,多产的) as forests, will be salted, and somewhere else staging assembled, a house stripped, a dog amused at what trouble humans go to, dangling(悬挂的,摇摆的) their booted feet at the face of a house as the hammers hound the quiet of day, as the afternoon arcs around our deep imperfections, and we measure with expectation another course, another line. |