We arrive here in this world having forgotten where we came from,
though something of a memory seems to remain: a whisper, a
distant shine like that of a house window at night on the far side
of the valley, perhaps what some have called "the inner light," to
guide us when finally we have been jolted awake. And so we
don't come from nothing. But once here we don't know where we
are. At first I learned the world as a book written, completed the
day before my birth, not to be changed by another pen stroke.
And then I saw that some I know were departing from it, never
to return, and new strangers were arriving. The newcomers, if
they stayed, would learn more of less of where they were. And
then, in time, they too would depart, taking with them the sum
of all they had learned, leaving behind them maybe a few who
would remember them, and then the rememberers too would go
and be gone. I see in this order of things, nothing to complain
about. I have been here long enough to watch the whole turn of
the wheel. I see that we are passing through this world like a
river of water flowing through a river of earth. A far cry from a
written book, the world - to extend my desperate metaphor - is
a book ceaselessly being written, and not in a human language.
This too has not been submitted to our judgment, and it is not
for us to regret. To give thanks seems truly to be the right
response, for as we come and go we learn something of love,
the gift and the giving of it, if we accept it...
though something of a memory seems to remain: a whisper, a
distant shine like that of a house window at night on the far side
of the valley, perhaps what some have called "the inner light," to
guide us when finally we have been jolted awake. And so we
don't come from nothing. But once here we don't know where we
are. At first I learned the world as a book written, completed the
day before my birth, not to be changed by another pen stroke.
And then I saw that some I know were departing from it, never
to return, and new strangers were arriving. The newcomers, if
they stayed, would learn more of less of where they were. And
then, in time, they too would depart, taking with them the sum
of all they had learned, leaving behind them maybe a few who
would remember them, and then the rememberers too would go
and be gone. I see in this order of things, nothing to complain
about. I have been here long enough to watch the whole turn of
the wheel. I see that we are passing through this world like a
river of water flowing through a river of earth. A far cry from a
written book, the world - to extend my desperate metaphor - is
a book ceaselessly being written, and not in a human language.
This too has not been submitted to our judgment, and it is not
for us to regret. To give thanks seems truly to be the right
response, for as we come and go we learn something of love,
the gift and the giving of it, if we accept it...
That is the heart speaking in the heart's language, and out of
a mystery so vast that order and chance may be reconciled
within it. Because, for all we surely know, we come into our
times and places as much at random as leaves falling...
a mystery so vast that order and chance may be reconciled
within it. Because, for all we surely know, we come into our
times and places as much at random as leaves falling...
Wendell Berry
from How it Went - Thirteen more stories of
the Port William membership
the Port William membership
with thanks to The Beauty We Love
~
Photo -Mystic Meandering
Thanks. Beautifully said.
ReplyDeleteLove this. I treasure Wendell Berry's words.
ReplyDelete