Theory of Truth (Reference to The Women at Point Sur) I stand near Soberanes Creek, on the knoll over the sea, west of the road. I remember This is the very place where Arthur Barclay, a priest in revolt, proposed three questions to himself: First, is there a God and of what nature? Second, whether there's anything after we die but worm's meat? Third, how should men live? Large time-worn questions no doubt; yet he touched his answers, they are not unattainable; But presently lost them again in the glimmer of insanity. How many minds have worn these questions; old coins Rubbed faceless, dateless. The most have despaired and accepted doctrine; the greatest have achieved answers, but always With aching strands of insanity in them. I think of Lao-tze; and the dear beauty of the Jew whom they crucified but he lived, he was greater than Rome; And godless Buddha under the boh-tree, straining through his mind the delusions and miseries of human life. Why does insanity always twist the great answers? Because only tormented persons want truth. Man is an animal like other animals, wants food and success and women, not truth. Only if the mind Tortured by some interior tension has despaired of happiness: then it hates its life-cage and seeks further, And finds, if it is powerful enough. But instantly the private agony that made the search Muddles the finding. Here was a man who envied the chiefs of the provinces of China their power and pride, And envied Confucius his fame for wisdom. Tortured by hardly conscious envy he hunted the truth of things, Caught it, and stained it through with his private impurity. He praised inaction, silence, vacancy: why? Because the princes and officers were full of business, and wise Confucius of words. Here was a man who was born a bastard, and among the people That more than any in the world valued race-purity, chastity, the prophetic splendors of the race of David. Oh intolerable wound, dimly perceived. Too loving to curse his mother, desert-driven, devil-haunted, The beautiful young poet found truth in the desert, but found also Fantastic solution of hopeless anguish. The carpenter was not his father? Because God was his father, Not a man sinning, but the pure holiness and power of God. His personal anguish and insane solution Have stained an age; nearly two thousand years are one vast poem drunk with the wine of his blood. And here was another Saviour, a prince in India, A man who loved and pitied with such intense comprehension of pain that he was willing to annihilate Nature and the earth and stars, life and mankind, to annul the suffering. He also sought and found truth, And mixed it with his private impurity, the pity, the denials. Then search for truth is foredoomed and frustrate? Only stained fragments? Until the mind has turned its love from itself and man, from parts to the whole. - Robinson Jeffers, 1937.
The greatest American poet, IMHO.
I took the picture above in November, 2009, not far from Point Sur, California.