“If
any man knows not that the star Arcturus
has
his course nearest the topmost pole
how
shall he not be amazed
that
Boötes so slowly takes his wain
and
is so late to dip his brightness in the ocean,
and
yet so swiftly turns to rise again?
The
law of heaven on high will but bewilder him.
When
the full moon grows dim to its horns,
darkened
by the shadow of dull night,
when
Phoebe thus lays bare all the varying bands of the stars,
which
she had hidden by the power of her shining face:
then
are the nations stirred by the errors of the vulgar,
and
beat without ceasing brazen cymbals.
No
man is surprised when the blasts of the wind
beat
a shore with roaring waves,
nor
when a solid mass of frozen snow
is
melted by the warmth of Phoebus' rays;
for
herein the causes are ready at hand to be understood.
But
in those other matters the causes are hidden,
and
so do trouble all men's hearts,
for
time does not grant them
to
advance with experience in such things as seldom recur:
the
common herd is ever amazed at all that is extraordinary.
But
let the cloudy errors of ignorance depart,
and
straightway these shall seem no longer marvelous.”
—from
Book 4, Poem 5
Why
might I be perfectly willing to accept order, purpose, and design in some
aspects of Nature, while being quite clueless about such meaning in other
aspects?
If
science has taught me that there is causality and balance in the physical
world, why am I so quick to assume that there is no causality and balance in
the moral world?
Are
there facts and reasons governing the body, but no facts and reasons governing
the soul?
Will
some things in the Universe work out as they should, while other things will
never work out at all?
If I
only think it through for a moment, it seems rather ridiculous for me to deny
that there is any order at all, just because I don’t immediately perceive that order.
Perhaps I have not looked carefully at the right things, or in the right way?
Perhaps
a man cannot immediately work out why heavy things fall, or water flows, or the
wind blows, or fire burns, but he will soon see a pattern in how they behave,
and before long their behavior will become so everyday that he will hardly
think twice about them.
There
are things far grander in scale, and far more mysterious, like the motions of
the heavens or the changes of the seasons, that may puzzle him far more, but
even there he learns that the sun, the moon, and the stars follow a complex sequence,
one that repeats itself over and over again. The causes may remain hidden for
some time, and he may be filled with wonder, but the harmony is already peeking
through.
I can
learn why something acts as it does
only when I have rightly understood what
it is by its nature. Though it may take me many years, or it may take the whole
human race many generations, to solve a puzzle, it is patient observation and careful
reasoning that yield greater understanding. The Universe, slowly but surely,
reveals her workings to an open and willing mind.
The
obstacle will not be in the things themselves, but in my poor estimation of
them. I do myself a great disservice when I assume there is no order, or likewise when
I make up imaginary causes to satisfy my eagerness for a hasty solution.
Some
people may shrug their shoulders and give up farming if the weather won’t cooperate,
while others may learn to plant at the right time. Some people may yell at the
sky or sacrifice a goat when it doesn’t rain, while others will become familiar
with the cycle of the seasons.
Now if I
insist that my life is unfair, that nothing good can come from my situation, or
that there is no Providence, am I not like the lazy farmer? If I pray to
shadows, and worship false idols, am I not replacing wisdom with mere superstition?
I only
think life is unjust, and that vice is unpunished while virtue goes unrewarded,
when I am ignorant of my own nature, and when I turn away from the my place in
all of Nature. It looks upside down, but I am upside down. I have started with
a confusion about what is greater or lesser in life, and so I grow frustrated with
life.
Wisdom
can make ordinary what ignorance found extraordinary.
The
stars don’t disappear if I am looking for them on the ground. Justice doesn’t
disappear if I am searching for it in the wrong place.
Written in 11/2015
No comments:
Post a Comment