Tuesday, September 29, 2009

More Frankenstein for You



Here are a few more pictures from the Frankenstein fall festival, which was Sunday.

I felt they ought to be in a separate post because they don't have a lot to do with the festival, per se; plus that previous post was getting a little long, it seemed.

Anyway, here are a few pictures of the church's exterior, and then some photos of the church's cemetery.






On the cemetery, the boneyard, the bury-patch, the marble orchard: Yeah, we have fun and go to the festivals and enjoy watching the kiddies do the bean-bag toss. We pig out on the excellent home-baked chow. But we also like to walk through the old cemeteries.




There are some very old graves in the Frankenstein cemetery. A large number of tombstones are written in German. I'm sure many of the individuals buried here were the founders of the community.




I have to say that the old custom of having a cemetery in the churchyard must go far in helping people keep everything . . . in "perspective." I think our society likes to pretend that death doesn't happen; graves are locked away from us in special plots of ground, segregated from our daily lives, so that we don't have to be reminded of death often, unless we whoosh past it while driving (which is desensitizing), or if we choose to visit it.

But the people who put these stones here wanted us to see them. Us! . . . Yes, us. The people from the future.




But when the cemetery is right there each time you go to church--right in the center of town, right next to the playground, right there in the background of the fall festival, the summer picnics, the wedding receptions and baptisms, some of the most significant moments of our lives--it helps remind us of mortality, of history, of ancestry. It's not necessarily a downer.

And it adds a silent--yet distinctly present--voice to the chorus of sensations all around us.


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