Anniversary
This is not about the Queen’s ninetieth birthday, but a single moment exactly ten years ago. I wrote about it then, while it was fresh in my mind (a). I said I’d learned something and would never be the same again. I couldn’t express it very well for others to read, but it’s helped to remind its author of the occasion. And I stand by the verdict I gave then. It marked a turning-point in my life.
I’ve edited the original piece, enhanced with what I remember but didn’t feel able to say at the time:
I was walking along Ledborough Avenue to its intersection with West Vale Road. People in cars were waiting for the lights to change. Some pedestrians stopped off at the doctor’s surgery or the lab next door where they tested blood and so forth. Beyond that was an oily yard where mechanics were repairing taxis. Suddenly it hit me, that all of us are more than our bodies and minds.That’s what I might have written if my skill in language had been better ten years ago—or if I thought to spend an indefinite time redrafting text. The revision is more faithful to the original experience, helps me relive it. And as I do, it suddenly puts me in mind of something I’ve heard. When there is heavy flooding in parts of Africa, animals take refuge on floating logs, where predator and prey coexist quietly, abandoning normal behaviour, as if united in a common thanksgiving. Or as if they can take a holiday from everyday instinct, and know they are infinite beings. I tried to find an account of this on Google, with limited success: only a blurry video of a snake and mouse sheltering together on a ledge under a bridge, trapped by the swirling waters all around.
At about 11am on Tuesday 13th June 2006 I obtained personal knowledge, the kind that changes you permanently. It is something you cannot get by any shortcuts. A teacher could not convey it without possessing it. A student could not learn it without being ready.
I felt that each of the persons I saw was an immortal being. I wanted to acknowledge to them that I knew; but I could not know whether they knew it themselves. I had no idea how to share it, certainly not in words. I don’t know how to express it even now. I don’t mean “immortal” in any conventional sense. Would “infinite beings” be better?
What I meant to say was that in each one I saw something to celebrate in their very existence, something which transcended how they looked and moved, was unaffected by their lot in life, as lived day to day. It was as if to say, we are all in this together, we are acting in this play, performing our allotted roles, according to the throw of the dice—or God’s will, if you prefer to put it that way.
However we express it, whatever we believe, our lives are circumscribed, we can only go on from where we are with what we’ve got, each on a personal path from birth to death. But I saw our true selves there, each of us, in one sweep of the eye, and it was like a joyful embrace, for we were one: a team of infinite beings. I knew of no way to share it, not through an exchange of glances, or any form of greeting. I knew this thing in that moment, but did they?
It also puts me in mind of an Anglican hymn written for children, “All things bright and beautiful” which in its original form includes this verse:
The rich man in his castleIt was published in 1848, the same year as Marx & Engels’ Communist Manifesto. Latterly the Church of England has been anxious to suppress evidence of its former support of the status quo, ruling classes and Government, to the point where some see it now as Socialist in politics. (b)
The poor man at his gate
God made them high or lowly
And ordered their estate.
If you take the verse in context (see scan alongside) you see that it’s an essential part of the author’s theme, to encourage children to look, and see the wonderful things of this world as gifts from an invisible Giver. Take away the verse and it’s incomplete, all of nature referred to except humanity. Subject to the constraints of her chosen verse form, she’s merely saying that by “man” she doesn’t mean any particular kind of person. So she takes the extremes: rich, poor, high, lowly, to include them equally among the bright and beautiful things to be seen and contemplated. Did God order their estate? In a song for children (of any age) on the theme of good gifts from an invisible Giver, her answer doesn’t trouble itself with theology or social justice. We (as little children) should open ourselves to admire the beauty around us, as a entry point to spiritual knowledge.
I’d like to share an example of how, by contrast, the Church of England had no compunction in perverting its spiritual authority as an institution. To help promote the war effort, in 1915 the Archbishop of Canterbury issued a Pastoral (c) or special sermon to be read in all churches and published in newspapers (d). Here’s an excerpt:
What is at stake is not only the honour of our plighted word, but our safety and freedom, and the place entrusted to us among the nations of the earth(1). The spirit arrayed against us(2) threatens the very foundations of civilized order in Christendom(3). It wields immense and ruthless power. It can only be decisively rolled back(4) if we, for our part, concentrate the whole strength of body, mind, and soul which our nation, our Empire, holds(5).My glossary of weasel words used by the Archbishop:
(1) = entitlement to have an Empire
(2) = Germany
(3) = the status quo
(4) = defeated in war
(5) = military support expected from the Empire
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The truth remains camouflaged among all the baggage. The true Way or Tao is a precious secret eternally hidden in plain view, waiting for our eyes to notice it, almost too simple to be grasped.
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Notes
(a)this post
(b)Try googling “the Tory party at prayer”
(c)Full text here
(d)As reprinted in a newspaper here
6 Comments:
Sunday at meeting for worship my mind focused on the image of the cave. I knew how Plato had used the image but I knew none of the words Plato had used to convey his insight. But I could see in my mind's eye a group of people staring at a wall on which shadows played a tableau of life. Light flowed into the cave from behind the people. Some eventually realized that they themselves were real and that the shadows were a pretense. When they turned toward the light and began to exit they became themselves. But on leaving the cave they were exposed to a light that was too intense for them. They could return to the cave or shield themselves from the brightness.
Perhaps this is the brightness Blake meant when he said that the little black boy had to teach the little white boy to bear the beams of love which are brighter than his ability to tolerate.
"And we are put on earth a little space,
That we may learn to bear the beams of love,
And these black bodies and this sun-burnt face
Is but a cloud, and like a shady grove.
SONGS 10
For when our souls have learn'd the heat to bear
The cloud will vanish we shall hear his voice.
Saying: come out from the grove my love & care,
And round my golden tent like lambs rejoice.
Thus did my mother say and kissed me,
And thus I say to little English boy;
When I from black and he from white cloud free,
And round the tent of God like lambs we joy:
Ill shade him from the heat till he can bear,
To lean in joy upon our fathers knee.
And then I'll stand and stroke his silver hair,
And be like him and he will then love me."
William Blake, Songs of Innocence, Little Black Boy
Above is an intuitive response to your post. A more rational response is that we pass through stages. We may at first be deceived by the shadow images, but we may be awakened to our true nature. But further steps are required; we must exit the cave and acclimatise ourselves to living in the painful light of truth which is inescapable.
Yes, "...place entrusted to us among the nations of the earth..." reminds me a bit of the concept of Manifest Destiny that we had here in America.
Ellie, thanks, I was much taken with your comparison of Plato's cave and Blake's poem, and felt a spark of understanding emerging from it—the shadow representing our limited consciousness, while the light here is the kind of illumination I was trying to describe in my piece. I was glad to find recognition of what i was trying to describe from several sources: you, Plato, Blake.
What I could not grasp though was your adjectives "painful" and "inescapable" to the light of truth and the need for acclimatisation. So then I looked it up and discovered that it was Plato who had described it thus. At this point my intuitive understanding fizzled out, for I could not find in myself what Plato said. You might be able to put me right, though.
Bryan, thanks, I'd heard various times of the phrase "Manifest Destiny" without ever looking it up. Now it does indeed seem similar to the notion of moral responsibility for less advanced nations that was used by the British to justify the Empire in its latter days.
I guess in America though, the concept was not linked with the idea of Christian duty so blatantly as it was over here.
I though the latter part of your post was pointing out that the darkness is never completely expelled by the light. We continue to encounter it in ourselves and in the exterior world. We can see the faults in the Archbishop's thinking but he could not see them himself. But perhaps our own failings can be revealed to us by focusing on his his failure to know how his words said other than he intended. It is painful to try to root out the errors in whose grip we are, but if we do, we may be better able to tolerate more of what the brightness can reveal.
"Immortal, invisible, God only wise,
in light inaccessible hid from our eyes,"
http://www.hymnsite.com/lyrics/umh103.sht
You always help me see things through other eyes.
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