“O happy was that early age of men,
contented with their trusted and
unfailing fields,
nor ruined by the wealth that weakens.
Easily was the acorn got that used to
satisfy their longwhile fast.
They knew not Bacchus' gifts, nor honey
mixed therewith.
They knew not how to tinge with Tyre's
purple dyes the sheen of China's silks.
Their sleep kept health on rush and
grass.
The stream gave them to drink as it
flowed by.
The lofty pine to them gave shade.
Not one of them yet clave the ocean's
depths,
nor, carrying stores of merchandise,
had visited new shores.
Then was not heard the battle's trump,
nor had blood made red with bitter hate
the bristling swords of war.
For why should any madness urge to take
up first their arms
upon an enemy such ones as knew no
sight of cruel wounds
nor knew rewards that could be reaped
in blood?
Would that our times could but return
to those old ways!
But love of gain and greed of holding
burn more fiercely far than Ætna's
fires.
Ah! who was the wretch who first unearthed
the mass of hidden gold,
the gems that only longed to lie
unfound?
For full of danger was the prize he
found.”
—from
Book 2, Poem 5
The
skeptic and cynic in me is always wary of thinking that the past must surely have
been better than the present, that we were at some point in time closer to the
gods, or that men once possessed far greater virtue than they do now. I am
never quite sure what to think of this literally, though I suspect that,
whatever we were like in prehistory, there is a great figurative truth here.
Whatever
may have happened in a certain time or at a certain place, we are all indeed
better and greater the closer we are to virtue and to its ultimate source, and
we are all indeed worse and lesser the further we distance ourselves from
virtue and its ultimate source. That distance may not necessarily be one of time or place, but it may be one of conviction.
I can
easily imagine a state where man is content with what Nature has given him,
where his is not tempted by wealth, where he is happy to embrace simplicity. He
has not been dragged into gluttony, lust, and drunkenness, he is not obsessed
with the profit of trade, and he does not seek to destroy his brothers in war.
What
could make such a state of affairs possible, way back when, far in the future,
or even right at this moment? Some would say that such a life is impossible,
because people are just made to be bad. Yet I wonder if, in fact, they are made
to be good, but only certain choices, the abuses of their freedoms, lead them
to what is bad? Isn’t it what someone decides to love that will determine how
well, or how poorly, he ends up living?
Lady
Philosophy has already been making it clear that what we seek, and why we seek
it, will end up making all of the difference. If we look to our own character
as the measure of life, we will demand nothing more than what Nature has
already given us. If we look to pleasure, power, or wealth as the measure of
life, we will demand only to receive, and we will fight one another over the
spoils.
I was
always fascinated, and terrified, by that scene in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, “The Dawn of
Man,” where the primates learn the use of violence to gain possession of the
watering hole. I hope I was not alone in asking if this was a good or a bad
thing, progress in the right direction or a step away in the wrong direction? I
leave it to the anthropologists to look at the huge sweep of human development,
but on merely a personal level, I could only wonder what I would choose to do,
if I felt I needed to pay the price of murder in order to get first pick of
what I could eat and drink?
Perhaps
the very fact that I might understand something about the choice is the actual
progress, that I can even make the choice to begin with, or that I can decide
what I desire and what I despise.
Life is
never as simple as a film, or even a history book, but the question rings in my
ears, just as it does when I read the Consolation:
when am I getting it right, and when am I getting it wrong? I can only answer
that, once again, when I understand what is truly worth having in this life. Were
all the riches we ended up finding a blessing, or a curse? The danger may well
be making myself subject to their nature, and not to the nature within myself.
Written in 9/2015
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