It's
3:00 a.m. and I can't sleep. I get up and look out. There's a bright
moon shining on Lake Michigan. A few stars are twinkling. I take a deep
breath and think. What to do at 3 a.m.? I take down a book I had been
intending to read: "Chauvet Cave-the oldest paintings in the world," a
book I pulled off the shelf at the library a few days ago. It was a
great choice. I am astonished by the gorgeous cave paintings, the oldest
found yet--they are some 30,000 years old. The shapes and colors of
animals awe me: mammoths, rhinoceros, lions, horses, bears and one owl.
Maybe just like the owl I am listening to right now.
When
the cave was discovered in France in 1994, its location and the beauty
of its art astonished specialists. Who would have guessed that people
that long ago could be so sophisticated in their drawing. They used
contours of the cave to dramatize the shapes of animals. The unknown
master artist used perspective to show great herds of animals running
and used shading on their bodies. There were a few handprints outlined
in red and the imprints of a pair of hands in the clay on the floor of
the cave.
Even
more astonishing were the huge footprints of cave bears and mixed in
their tracks were paint pigments used on the walls. Imagine painting a
masterpiece and having huge bears tracking through the paint. How
distracting. In some places, the bears had incised the paintings on the
cave walls with their huge claws.
Cave
bears are now extinct. They were larger than even the largest bears we
know of today. Chauvet Cave was littered with many bear skulls and
bones. If the bears had died while hibernating, that might explain part
of it. But one bear skull had been deliberately set on a huge stone that
had fallen from the ceiling as if it were an altar.
What
had these early people been thinking to paint running herds of animals,
bison, and ibex, all beautifully, poetically rendered, and solitary
bears in a cave stunning in its beauty with calcite stone draperies and
ochre colored walls. All of this remained in pristine condition for
30,000 years and then not very long ago expert cavers discovered it. The
government of France is making sure that none of it is destroyed by
eager tourists or even research teams who may inadvertently destroy the
evidence of early man and the animals they obviously admired.
The
work is still being carried on and there is a lot to learn from the
cave. I was thrilled to find the book, even though it is not a brand new
book. The book is wonderful, but now it's getting light outside, my
eyes are tired and my foot has gone to sleep.
I
take my bike out of the garage and head for the boardwalk. There's a
nip in the air, but the lake is warm. And I see there are a few
fishermen out all ready. Maybe one was there all night--he seems to be
sleeping. The river smells of fish. There are a lot of carp, but a few
white fish have started biting. Soon there will be tons of them and
fishermen and women and children will be flocking like seagulls - or
cave bears - at a picnic.
I
turn my bike around and head back just as the sun is bouncing up on the
horizon over the town. It looks huge and red this morning sending a
glow over the ambitious joggers I meet on the boardwalk.
Early
morning is a great time to jog or ride a bike. There's very little
traffic and everything looks like the dawn of time. Obviously I'm seeing
the world through the eyes of ancient cave bears and master artists -
and the prints left in Chauvet Cave are still imprinted on my mind.
It is 7:30. Time to start my day. I head for home.
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