Springboro, Ohio, is two hundred
years old. This blog installment is the first of six that will feature my
original watercolor paintings depicting scenes in the vicinity of Springboro.
If you would like to purchase one of the paintings, send me a message through
my website at roberttrhode.org or via Facebook.
The art measures 5″ by 7″ and consists
of Cotman Water Colours by Winsor & Newton on acid-free Montval watercolor
paper.
Giant
Sycamore Near Springboro, Ohio
Original
Watercolor Painting by Robert T. Rhode
|
One day, I
had parked to appreciate the majesty of the giant sycamore, and, from across
the street, a resident called to me, “That tree is over two hundred years old.”
Imagine that! A tree older than Springboro itself! A tree that was already
growing in that location before the Quakers had come to build blacksmith shops,
houses, and mills to form a community! The resident said he had lived nearby for
fifty years and that, when he first moved to that location, he had conversed
with a woman who was approaching a century; the woman had told him that her
father had said that the tree was standing there when he was a boy.
I wonder
what the tree could tell us if it could talk. In a way, it does talk: that is,
it expresses itself through the artistic arcs of its branches and the dappled
canopy of its leaves. The immense trunk amazes me! Despite the colossal size of
the sycamore, the tree comforts me. Even though I am a writer, an explanation
of what I just wrote will not be easily conveyed. Something in the softly varied
tones of the bark, in the leaves spread like broad hands, and in the steadfast
posture of the tree lends a feeling of security. The sycamore is parental. It
gathers its happy children beneath its branches.
The
township has provided a table or two for picnics in the shade of the mammoth
tree, and, when driving past, I have noted people enjoying lunch beneath the
towering sycamore.
Creeks are
favorite spots for sycamores to become established, and (Sure enough!) Clear
Creek runs its sparkling course just behind the picnic area.
The
patriarchal sycamore may well have been growing near Clear Creek during the
American Revolution. Miami or Shawnee people may have camped beneath it. The
tree could easily have been standing there when Ohio became a state in 1803 and
was almost certainly in place when the War of 1812 began. Thinking of how many
sunrises this living tree has witnessed dwarfs my imagination. It has stood
serenely in one spot for so many days, while I have darted hither and yon in my
hectic life. By comparison to the tree, I am a firefly flashing across the
landscape for relatively few summer nights.
Peace is
the message of the sycamore, which yet celebrates the rolling seasons. The tree
stands as a tranquil philosopher—as nature itself, proving day by day a good
way to live.
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