The Anarchy of Thought

Charity begins at home. Perhaps. But then so does the long revolution against the Establishment.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

September 21, 1875

Under Oriental Skies

I have become a woman of many selves who in search of her-self arrives home either too early or too late, but never in time. Too early when I do not know what the questions are that hover around my mind, and too late when I find that they have already been answered for me. How wonderful it would be when I am at that stage when I can ask my own questions and provide my own answers. And yet, how would I know that they are mine? And not that someone has subtly, unknown to myself, inserted them into my soul?
I must therefore perform the impossible task of erasing whatever I am writing.

To grasp the splintered fragments of my being and bind them together around a unitary centre, ah the effort is so tiring, so frustrating, so riddled with our anxieties, hopes and fears! Even now as I write these very words I can feel myself inflicting a great violence on myself, trying to make them sound coherent to myself, when I know only too well that just below the surface there lies sleeping a desire to attempt the final dissolution of all words, all significance, and all meaning. But in having thus understood my intense wish, have I not defeated my claim that I do not comprehend my inner essence? Ah the conundrums of our existence!
How I remember Uncle Timothy at these times. Yes, he should have been living at this hour in my damp room in the hills of Simla. I would perhaps have sat down beside him, not to speak anything, for I have nothing left to say but to gaze on his gentle face as he smoked his pipe beside the window looking down into the valley. Never has a man taught me so much in my life precisely by adamantly refusing to accept that he had anything to teach me.
Someday I must also write to you about my other Uncle Aaron, God rest his soul, who committed suicide five years ago. Looking back at those times when I spent a month at his decrepit house in Cheltenham, I can
[Editor's note : 'I' has left an absence in between these paragraphs. It is not known whether this silence is deliberate.]
[Meta-Editor's note : [The Editor cannot conceal an impish delight in interpolating these parabolic inscriptions.]]
The older I grow I become convinced that it was the presence of men like Uncle Timothy and Aaron around me when I was a child that injected into the very core of my being a most profound melancholy and at the same time gave me a vision into things that are denied to most men and women around me.

I had a most beautiful dream last night, and the more I think about it the heavier that my heart grows with an inexplicable terror. Oh, am I really growing insane? Was James right after all?
I dreamt that I was on the banks of a lake just before dawn as the early birds were beginning to whisper. The waters were shrouded in semi-darkness as I spotted a mass of white floating in front of me. As I strained my eyes I saw a white swan swimming away from me towards the distant mountains. Slowly and slowly she sank deeper into the darkness until she became a tiny dot on the horizon.
From a great distance the
[Editor's note : 'I' breaks off suddenly at this point.]
[Meta-Editor's note : [The Editor is inflicting a sinister violence on a woman's text by pretending to understand her presences and absences.]]
Suddenly the sun rose into the blue sky, and a ray of warm light came shooting through the distance and pierced the very heart of the white swan. With a cry of the most fearful agony, the swan flapped its wings, rose into the air once, and then collapsed into the waters. I felt that it was not the swan but my own bosom that the ray had shattered into a thousand pieces.
Oh, the horror of the dream! Perhaps I have been listening too much to Sibelius and his Swan of Tuonela. Yes, that must be it.
I need Uncle Timothy today. Only he can understand me, these dilemmas that my pour twisted soul is racked with. Seek nothing else but the highest form of perfection, he once told me, but never forget for one moment that this seeking itself is the greatest futility any man can attempt.
My thoughts are becoming so tortuous every morning. In this agony, perhaps lies my liberation. And yet perhaps the memory of Uncle Aaron tells me that I am damned to be free.
My words are like an asymptotic curve that, at best, never reaches the limiting point it so passionately desires, and, at worst, a degenerate exercise in ironic narcissism. I have no occupation but my preoccupation with myself, and yet it is precisely this act of sinking into myself that, by reminding me of my utter finitude, drags me outwards.
On Monday mornings, I am an atheist despising the masses who bow down to the idols of the marketplace and yet in the evenings, I become a devout Anglican who piously kneels before her Lord, the Redeemer and the Saviour. On Tuesday evenings, I am a great lover of Beethoven and all the French, the Flemish and the Dutch masters, but on Wednesday mornings I wake up to find myself pouring scorn on all lovers of such high art. I spend the Thursdays poring over dusty volumes under whose weight the shelves of my living room groan, and Fridays laughing at the futility of the task I have attempted. Saturdays I sneer at those tiny little people cooped up in their narrow homes drinking tea and honey, but on Sundays I rebuke myself for such cynicism and want to run away to my dear Mama.
Oh, who shall deliver me from this body of contradictions? The truth that I seek I do not will, but the one that I scorn, I find myself running towards.
Let this diary be a record of my growing insanity.
Of my painful realisation that self-reflexivity is the highest blessing and the greatest curse.
Of my nostalgia for an age of unfragmented humanity where perhaps human beings used to live with all their inner tensions reconciled into a most wholesome harmony with the order of Mother Nature.
And above all, above all, a record of how powerful a tool language is, dissolving itself in the very moment of producing itself, embodying a most painful tension that only death can resolve.
And if this be insanity, ah for its blissful torments!

2 Comments:

  • At 25.11.05, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    Dear Victoria,

    Wonderful it is not when you can ask your own questions and provide your own answers. Wonderful it is when there are no questions and no need for an answer. It is indeed wonderful when you can say: I have become an answer to myself.

    In having felt in its entirety (felt, not understood) your intense wish you have not quite defeated your claim that you do not comprehend your essence, but you have surely come a step closer to it. If you understood this wish completely, then there would be questions no more. But that is fine: to have felt it so INTENSELY that the FEELING becomes a SEEING is to already have taken the first step towards understanding it.

    It is a pleasure to notice that you have also taken the second step: seeking in thought. But with due respects to Uncle Timothy and Aaron, who taught you to philosophise and at the same time indicated it's futility to you, I must say that the first and the second steps are not enough. There are much much more still waiting to be explored. The benediction of philosophy (rather of the act of philosophising) is that it can take you to the point where it reaches it's limit. It is not that your words never reach the limiting point. Quite the contrary. Words (rather thoughts) ALWAYS reach a limiting point. And having reached and seen that point, you have ONLY two options: you can spend your life immersed in language watching it dissolve itself in the very moment of producing itself, OR you can move ahead (with due thanks to the language/thought which itself has shown you it's own futility) and BE that which you already are and yet you so long to become.

    However, I understand that moving from the second to the third step is much more difficult than moving from the first to the second step (although I agree with you that most men and women never get around to doing even that).
    Right now you have to LIVE WITH contradictions, if you take the third step then you have to LIVE contradictions.

    Read this:
    The Lord is my shepherd
    I shall not want.
    He maketh me to lie down in green pastures
    He leadeth me beside the still waters.
    He restoreth my soul
    He guideth me in straight paths for His name's sake.
    Yea, Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death
    I will fear no evil
    For Thou art with me
    Thy rod and thy staff
    They comfort me.

    Now, the problem is that HE (although I usually don't find the use of HE appropriate, this personification is useful in this context, so I will use it) does not always lead you into straight paths, green pastures, and still waters. That they ARE straight, green and still (only and only because HE has led you into them) is another matter, but they will not SEEM so (to yourself and to others around you). To actually FOLLOW these seemingly crooked paths will require more from you than you can possibly imagine sitting in your study writing this diary. It is a challenge and a discipline every moment. Such is the Anarchy of HIS shaft that one moment it unleashes Anarchy (as you might understand the word) and the very next moment (sometimes even simultaneously) it lovingly embraces the most unAnarchic of forms. And HIS shaft my dear Victoria, resides in the heart. Have you noticed that you doubt the origin of your thoughts but you never ask whether the heaviness in your heart or your longing for Truth belongs to you or is implanted by someone else. This is a very significant clue: feeling is much closer to your essence than thought (the use of HE renounced henceforth). I am not saying that feeling is THE essence, but it is very very close to it. So close that one can call it the voice of essence. However, once this voice is heard, it will HAVE to be FOLLOWED (actually no, you can choose not to follow it, and that and ONLY that much is your freedom) and in following it you will hear it more and more clearly. And one day when this hearing (this is reiterated in the second paragraph of this comment as well) becomes refined to perfection, you will realise that it is your OWN voice you were hearing all this time.

    A lot of Philosophers of the days bygone died as Philosophers because they could not take the third step. You my Dear Victoria please do not die as one.

     
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