C. S. Lewis |
There have been times when I think we do not desire
heaven; but more often I find myself wondering whether, in our heart of hearts,
we have ever desired anything else. You may have noticed that the books you really
love are bound together by a secret thread. You know very well what is the
common quality that makes you love them, though you cannot put it into words:
but most of your friends do not see it at all, and often wonder why, liking
this, you should also like that. Again, you have stood before some landscape,
which seems to embody what you have been looking for all your life; and then
turned to the friend at your side who appears to be seeing what you saw—but at
the first words a gulf yawns between you, and you realise that this landscape
means something totally different to him, that he is pursuing an alien vision
and cares nothing for the ineffable suggestion by which you are transported.
Even in your hobbies, has there not always been some secret attraction which
the others are curiously ignorant of—something, not to be identified with, but
always on the verge of breaking through, the smell of cut wood in the workshop
or the clap-clap of water against the boat’s side? Are not all lifelong
friendships born at the moment when at last you meet another human being who
has some inkling (but faint and uncertain even in the best) of that something
which you were born desiring, and which, beneath the flux of other desires and
in all the momentary silences between the louder passions, night and day, year
by year, from child- hood to old age, you are looking for, watching for,
listening for? You have never had it. All the things that have ever
deeply possessed your soul have been but hints of it—tantalising glimpses,
promises never quite fulfilled, echoes that died away just as they caught your
ear. But if it should really become manifest—if there ever came an echo that
did not die away but swelled into the sound itself—you would know it. Beyond
all possibility of doubt you would say ‘Here at last is the thing I was made
for.’ We cannot tell each other about it. It is the secret signature of each
soul, the incommunicable and unappeasable want, the thing we desired before we
met our wives or made our friends or chose our work, and which we shall still
desire on our deathbeds, when the mind no longer knows wife or friend or work.
While we are, this is. If we lose this, we lose all….
All your life an unattainable ecstasy has hovered
just beyond the grasp of your consciousness. The day is coming when you will
wake to find, beyond all hope, that you have attained it, or else, that it was
within your reach and you have lost it forever….
The thing I am speaking of is not an experience.
You have experienced only the want of it. The thing itself has never
actually been embodied in any thought, or image, or emotion. Always it has
summoned you out of yourself. And if you will not go out of yourself to follow
it, if you sit down to brood on the desire and attempt to cherish it, the
desire itself will evade you. ‘The door into life generally opens behind us’
and ‘the only wisdom’ for one ‘haunted with the scent of unseen roses, is
work.’ This secret fire goes out when you use the bellows: bank it down with
what seems unlikely fuel of dogma and ethics, turn your back on it and attend
to your duties, and then it will blaze.
--from The Problem of Pain
, pp. 149-153
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