Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Muse | Page 7

and a Modern Day Muse make up complete stories and life histories for the people whose names I saw there. Even if there were only initials, I would make up first names and middle names and relations for them, and use them as characters in my stories.” She adds, “I think I probably learned to read off of the stones. Because the letters are so big, they’re wonderful for kids. They’re just at child height. The inscriptions are brief and fascinating, unpredictable. So I don’t remember learning to read per se, but I do remember being fascinated by the inscriptions on the stones since I was tiny. I loved the ones with poems on them.”   One of her own poems that she wrote specifically about Mount Auburn centers on her first visit back to the Cem- etery after her son, Ben, was born. “Of course many stones memorialize children, but suddenly I had that parental grief that I hadn’t had before when I was reading the inscriptions on the monuments. Before they’d just been beautiful; this time they hit home.” Now That Benjamin is Three Months Old How could I have missed them? The headstones on this walk I’ve passed and re-passed twenty summers now, or more. “Our Angel Boy,” under a reclining cherub whose face and limbs have worn to blurring. Then “My Wife and Child.” The mother lifts the baby overhead in laughter. Sun streams down on broken rows of stones. For the first time, I leave the cemetery in tears. —Jessie Brown Immortalizing Mount Auburn… Richard Cheek, Photographer “There are many aspects of the Cemetery that I dearly love, but my affection for them may have nothing to do with my ability to capture them effectively. That’s up to the viewer to judge when looking at my photographs,” says photographer Richard Cheek. “I’m particularly fond of the way time has been allowed to gently take its toll at Mount Auburn: the great oak tree trunk that appears to have swallowed the balusters of an iron fence, the fading marble faces that have been worn away by tears of rain, and the faint inscriptions that now speak only to God because human eyes can no longer read them. I also appreciate the myriad of natural or man-made patterns that beg for your attention as you pass by, especially the seasonal carpets made by leaves, acorns, or flower petals that briefly overlie carved stone surfaces. But some of these aspects, such as indecipherable epitaphs, can be difficult to convey in a visually arresting manner.” Richard Cheek, a Belmont-based freelance photographer, made his first professional visit to Mount Auburn nearly four decades ago when working with the Cambridge Historical Commission on the Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge series. He returned to the Cemetery in the early 1980s to record the historic iron fence along Mount Auburn Street, before it disappeared, for the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiq- uities (now Historic New England), and again in the early 1990s to photograph the Cemetery for his book for The Trustees of Reservations Land of the Commonwealth. It was following that last assignment in 1993 that the Cem- etery commissioned Cheek to capture the beauties and mysteries of Mount Auburn for its own publications. Now, close to twenty years later, Cheek has a collection of several thousand photographs of the Cemetery. He has returned year after year to capture Mount Auburn’s unique qualities and, in the process, has created an important photographic document of this ever-evolving landscape. His images, all shot on film, highlight Mount Auburn’s most iconic and celebrated views as well as its more secretive and intimate corners and details. “I’ve expe- rienced so many extraordinary moments in so many locations all over the Cemetery that I have no single favorite place. I’ve probably spent more time in Consecration Dell than any- where else; first, because my Above: Richard Cheek son, Benjamin, is buried there; Above, left: Bigelow Chapel, and second, because I took the photo by Richard Cheek photographs for A Guide To Fall/Winter 2011 | 5