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The priest never used blueprints, but worked all the many designs out of his head.
Father Wilerus, transplanted Alsatian, built around this plain Wisconsin
redbrick church a coral-reef en- crustation--meant, the brochure says,
to glorify America and heaven simul- taneously. Thus: Mary and Columbus
and the Sacred Heart equally enthroned in a fantasia of quartz and seashells, broken
dishes, stalactites and stick-shift knobs-- no separation of nature and art
for Father Wilerus! He's built fabulous blooms --bristling mosaic tiles bunched into chipped,
permanent roses--- and more glisteny stuff than I can catalogue, which seems to he the point:
a spectacle, saints and Stars and Stripes billowing in hillocks of concrete. Stubborn
insistence on rendering invisibles solid. What's more frankly actual than cement? Surfaced,
here, in pure decor: even the railings curlicued with rows of identical whelks,
even the lampposts and birdhouses, and big encrusted urns wagging with lunar flowers!
A little dizzy, the world he's made, and completely unapologetic, high
on a hill in Dickeyville so the wind whips around like crazy. A bit pigheaded,
yet full of love for glitter qua glitter, sheer materiality; a bit foolhardy
and yet -- sly sparkle -- he's made matter giddy. Exactly what he wanted, I'd guess: the very stones
gone lacy and beaded, an airy intricacy of froth and glimmer. For God? Country?
Lucky man: his purpose pales beside the fizzy, weightless fact of rock.
Mark Doty
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Read poems about / on: concrete, america, crazy, father, nature, heaven, wind, world, god, rose, star, flower, work
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