In her article, Following the
Birds, Terri Windling quotes H.E. Bates´s book, Through
the Woods, the Story of a Year in an English Woodland. Bates is describing the
busy, beautiful, bird-filled months of the passage from winter to summer.
As a comment, Windling writes:
”For me, the challenge in
writing fantasy fiction springing from the myths and folklore of the land is to
evoke the numinous world of nature with such precise yet poetical language. Others have done it. Hope Mirrlees, Sylvia Townsend Warner,
Patricia McKillip, Diana Wynne Jones, Jane Yolen, Alan Garner, Robert
Holdstock, Graham Joyce...to name just a few. Not all fantasy does this, of
course. It's a very broad form of literature, containing many different
approaches to the "lands beyond the fields we know." But this is the
kind of fantasy that thrills me best, and the tradition I want to follow.
Whether writing rural stories or urban stories, whether set in this world or
wholly imaginary lands, I want to go further and further into the green....
Following the birds.”
The movement of search can
only be from the mundane world to the mundane world, and all that the mind can
do is to be aware that this movement will never uncover the Otherworld. How
is one to find The Way Between the Worlds?
Any movement on the part of the
mundane is still within the field of the mundane. That is the only thing I have
to perceive; that is the only thing the mind has to realize. Then, without any
stimulation, without any purpose, the mind is silent.
Have you not noticed that love
is silence? It may be while holding the hand of another, or looking lovingly at
a child, or taking in the beauty of an evening full of birdsong.
Love has no past or future,
and so it is with this extraordinary state of silence. And without this
silence, which is complete emptiness, there is no creation. You may be very
clever in your capacity, but where there is no creation, there is destruction,
decay, and the mind withers away.
When the mind is empty,
silent, when it is in a state of complete negation—which is not blankness, nor
the opposite of being positive, but a totally different state in which all
thought has ceased—only then is it possible for that which is unnameable to
come into being: the Otherworld.
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