What I might lamely describe as rain and the middle school girls laughingly referred to as moistiness, we stopped at the two painted silos. Beautifully painted with agricultural scenes, these two silos stood empty by the side of Route 15 for years.
I walked through a puddle-ish field. The girls, impetuous, ran.
I’ve been aching for weeks now for some brightness of color — and here it was — art transforming the landscape. Around the back of the further one was a barred owl I hadn’t seen. The girls wandered over cement pad around the silo, talking about what might have once been here.
Four more cars had parked around mine. We took one last look and headed off into the mist and rain — the moistiness — again.
In art, either as creators or participators, we are helped to remember some of the glorious things we have forgotten, and some of the terrible things we were asked to endure…
— From Madeline L’Engle’s Walking on Water