Wednesday, November 30, 2011

91. Feeling Cynical? Selections from "Letters From the Earth", by Mark Twain

Selections
from

"Letters From the Earth",

by
Mark Twain,

edited by
Bernard DeVoto,

Perennial Library,
Harper & Row, Publishers,
1938, 1974,
p. 14 - 20

Satan's Letter

This is a strange place, an extraordinary place, and interesting.

There is nothing resembling it at home.

The people are all insane, the other animals are all insane, the earth is insane,

Nature itself is insane.

Man is a marvelous curiosity.

When he is at his very very best he is a sort of low grade nickel-plated angel;
at his worst he is unspeakable, unimaginable; and first and last and all the time he is
a sarcasm.

Yet he blandly and in all sincerity calls himself the "noblest work of God."

This is the truth I am telling you.

And this is not a new idea with him, he has talked it through all the ages, and believed it.

Believed it, and found nobody among all his race to laugh at it.

Moreover -- if I may put another strain upon you --
he thinks he is the Creator's pet.
 
He believes the Creator is proud of him; he even believes the Creator loves him; has a passion for him; sits up nights to admire him; yes, and watch over him and keep him out of trouble.

He prays to Him, and thinks He listens.

Isn't it a quaint idea?

Fills his prayers with crude and bald and florid flatteries of Him, and thinks He sits and purrs over these extravagancies and enjoys them.
 
He prays for help, and favor, and protection, every day; and does it with hopefulness and confidence, too, although no prayer of his has ever been answered.
 
The daily affront, the daily defeat, do not discourage him, he goes on praying just the same.

There is something almost fine about this perseverance.

I must put one more strain upon you: he thinks he is going to heaven!

He has salaried teachers who tell him that.

They also tell him there is a hell, of everlasting fire, and that he will go to it if he doesn't keep the Commandments.

What are the Commandments?

They are a curiosity.

I will tell you about them by and by.

+++

Letter Two

"I have told you nothing about man that is not true."

You must pardon me if I repeat that remark now and then in these letters; I want you to take seriously the things I am telling you, and I feel that if I were in your place and you in mine, I should need that reminder from time to time, to keep my credulity from flagging.
 
For there is nothing about man that is not strange to an immortal.

He looks at nothing as we look at it, his sense of proportion is quite different from ours, and his sense of values is so widely divergent from ours, that with all our large intellectual powers it is not likely that even the most gifted among us would ever be quite able to understand it.

For instance, take this sample: he has imagined a heaven, and has left entirely out of it the supremest of all his delights, the one ecstasy that stands first and foremost in the heart of every individual of his race -- and of ours -- sexual intercourse!

It is as if a lost and perishing person in a roasting desert should be told by a rescuer he might choose and have all longed-for things but one, and he should elect to leave out water!

His heaven is like himself: strange, interesting, astonishing, grotesque.

I give you my word, it has not a single feature in it that he actually values.

It consists -- utterly and entirely -- of diversions which he cares next to nothing about, here in the earth, yet is quite sure he will like them in heaven.

Isn't it curious?

Isn't it interesting?

You must not think I am exaggerating, for it is not so.

I will give you details.

Most men do not sing, most men cannot sing, most men will not stay when others are singing if it be continued more than two hours.
 
Note that.
 
Only about two men in a hundred can play upon a musical instrument, and not four in a hundred have any wish to learn how.
 
Set that down.
 
Many men pray, not many of them like to do it.

A few pray long, the others make a short cut.

More men go to church than want to.

To forty-nine men in fifty the Sabbath Day is a dreary, dreary bore.

 Of all the men in a church on a Sunday, two-thirds are tired when the service is half over, and the rest before it is finished.

The gladdest moment for all of them is when the preacher uplifts his hands for the benediction.

You can hear the soft rustle of relief that sweeps the house, and you recognize that it is eloquent with gratitude.

All nations look down upon all other nations.

All nations dislike all other nations.

All white nations despise all colored nations, of whatever hue, and oppress them when they can.

White men will not associate with "niggers," nor marry them.

They will not allow them in their schools and churches.

All the world hates the Jew, and will not endure him except when he is rich.

I ask you to note all those particulars.

Further.

All sane people detest noise.

All people, sane or insane, like to have variety in their life.

Monotony quickly wearies them.

Every man, according to the mental equipment that has fallen to his share, exercises his intellect constantly, ceaselessly, and this exercise makes up a vast and valued and essential part of his life.

The lowest intellect, like the highest, possesses a skill of some kind and takes a keen pleasure in testing it, proving it, perfecting it.

The urchin who is his comrade's superior in games is as diligent and as enthusiastic in his practice as are the sculptor, the painter, the pianist, the mathematician and the rest.

Not one of them could be happy if his talent were put under an interdict.

Now then, you have the facts.

You know what the human race enjoys and what it doesn't enjoy.

It has invented a heaven out of its own head, all by itself: guess what it is like!

In fifteen hundred eternities you couldn't do it.

The ablest mind known to you or me in fifty million aeons couldn't do it.

Very well, I will tell you about it.

1. First of all, I recall to your attention the extraordinary fact with which I began.

To wit, that the human being, like the immortals, naturally places sexual intercourse far and away above all other joys -- yet he has left it out of his heaven!

The very thought of it excites him; opportunity sets him wild; in this state he will risk life, reputation, everything -- even his queer heaven itself -- to make good that opportunity and ride it to the overwhelming climax.

From youth to middle age all men and all women prize copulation above all other pleasures combined, yet it is actually as I have said: it is not in their heaven; prayer takes its place.

They prize it thus highly; yet, like all their so-called "boons," it is a poor thing.

At its very best and longest the act is brief beyond imagination -- the imagination of an immortal, I mean.

In the matter of repetition the man is limited -- oh, quite beyond immortal conception.

We who continue the act and its supremest ecstasies unbroken and without withdrawal for centuries, will never be able to understand or adequately pity the awful poverty of these people in that rich gift which, possessed as we possess it, makes all other possessions trivial and not worth the trouble of invoicing.

2. In man's heaven everybody sings!

The man who did not sing on earth sings there; the man who could not sing on earth is able to do it there.

The universal singing is not casual, not occasional, not relieved by intervals of quiet; it goes on, all day long, and every day, during a stretch of twelve hours.

And everybody stays; whereas in the earth the place would be empty in two hours.

The singing is of hymns alone.

Nay, it is of one hymn alone.

The words are always the same, in number they are only about a dozen, there is no rhyme, there is no poetry: "Hosannah, hosannah, hosannah, Lord God of Sabaoth, 'rah! 'rah! 'rah! siss! -- boom! ... a-a-ah!"

3. Meantime, every person is playing on a harp -- those millions and millions! -- whereas not more than twenty in the thousand of them could play an instrument in the earth, or ever wanted to.
 
Consider the deafening hurricane of sound -- millions and millions of voices screaming at once and millions and millions of harps gritting their teeth at the same time!

I ask you: is it hideous, is it odious, is it horrible?

Consider further: it is a praise service; a service of compliment, of flattery, of adulation!

Do you ask who it is that is willing to endure this strange compliment, this insane compliment; and who not only endures it, but likes it, enjoys it, requires if, commands it?

Hold your breath!

It is God!

This race's god, I mean.

He sits on his throne, attended by his four and twenty elders and some other dignitaries pertaining to his court, and looks out over his miles and miles of tempestuous worshipers, and smiles, and purrs, and nods his satisfaction northward, eastward, southward; as quaint and naive a spectacle as has yet been imagined in this universe, I take it.

It is easy to see that the inventor of the heavens did not originate the idea, but copied it from the show-ceremonies of some sorry little sovereign State up in the back settlements of the Orient somewhere.

All sane white people hate noise; yet they have tranquilly accepted this kind of heaven -- without thinking, without reflection, without examination -- and they actually want to go to it!

Profoundly devout old gray-headed men put in a large part of their time dreaming of the happy day when they will lay down the cares of this life and enter into the joys of that place.

Yet you can see how unreal it is to them, and how little it takes a grip upon them as being fact, for they make no practical preparation for the great change: you never see one of them with a harp, you never hear one of them sing.

As you have seen, that singular show is a service of praise: praise by hymn, praise by prostration.

It takes the place of "church."

Now then, in the earth these people cannot stand much church -- an hour and a quarter is the limit, and they draw the line at once a week.

That is to say, Sunday.

One day in seven; and even then they do not look forward to it with longing.

And so -- consider what their heaven provides for them: "church" that lasts forever, and a Sabbath that has no end!

They quickly weary of this brief hebdomadal Sabbath here, yet they long for that eternal one; they dream of it, they talk about it, they think they think they are going to enjoy it -- with all their simple hearts they think they think they are going to be happy in it!

It is because they do not think at all; they only think they think.

Whereas they can't think; not two human beings in ten thousand have anything to think with.

And as to imagination -- oh, well, look at their heaven!

They accept it, they approve it, they admire it.

That gives you their intellectual measure.

4. The inventor of their heaven empties into it all the nations of the earth, in one common jumble.

All are on an equality absolute, no one of them ranking another; they have to be "brothers"; they have to mix together, pray together, harp together, Hosannah together -- whites, niggers, Jews, everybody -- there's no distinction.

Here in the earth all nations hate each other, and every one of them hates the Jew.

Yet every pious person adores that heaven and wants to get into it.

He really does.

And when he is in a holy rapture he thinks he thinks that if he were only there he would take all the populace to his heart, and hug, and hug, and hug!

He is a marvel -- man is!

I would I knew who invented him.

5. Every man in the earth possesses some share of intellect, large or small; and be it large or be it small he takes pride in it.

Also his heart swells at mention of the names of the majestic intellectual chiefs of his race, and he loves the tale of their splendid achievements.

For he is of their blood, and in honoring themselves they have honored him.

Lo, what the mind of man can do! he cries, and calls the roll of the illustrious of all ages; and points to the imperishable literatures they have given to the world, and the mechanical wonders they have invented, and the glories wherewith they have clothed science and the arts; and to them he uncovers as to kings, and gives to them the profoundest homage, and the sincerest, his exultant heart can furnish -- thus exalting intellect above all things else in the world, and enthroning it there under the arching skies in a supremacy unapproachable.

And then he contrived a heaven that hasn't a rag of intellectuality in it anywhere!

Is it odd, is it curious, is it puzzling?
 
It is exactly as I have said, incredible as it may sound.

This sincere adorer of intellect and prodigal rewarder of its mighty services here in the earth has invented a religion and a heaven which pay no compliments to intellect, offer it no distinctions, fling it no largess: in fact, never even mention it.

By this time you will have noticed that the human being's heaven has been thought out and constructed upon an absolute definite plan; and that this plan is, that it shall contain, in labored detail, each and every imaginable thing that is repulsive to a man, and not a single thing he likes!

Very well, the further we proceed the more will this curious fact be apparent.

Make a note of it: in man's heaven there are no exercises for the intellect, nothing for it to live upon.

It would rot there in a year -- rot and stink.

Rot and stink -- and at that stage become holy.

A blessed thing: for only the holy can stand the joys of that bedlam.

+++

From Wikipedia:

"Letters from the Earth" is one of Mark Twain's posthumously published works.

The essays were written during a difficult time in Twain's life; he was deep in debt and had lost his wife and one of his daughters.

Initially, his daughter, Clara Clemens, objected to its publication in March 1939, probably because of its controversial and iconoclastic views on religion, claiming it presented a "distorted"  view of her father.

Henry Nash Smith helped change her position in 1960.

Clara explained her change of heart in 1962 saying that "Mark Twain belonged to the world" and that public opinion had become more tolerant.

She was also influenced to release the papers due to her annoyance with Soviet propaganda charges that her father's ideas were being suppressed in the United States.

The papers were edited in 1939 by Bernard DeVoto.

The book consists of a series of short stories, many of which deal with God and Christianity.

The title story consists of eleven letters written by the archangel Satan to archangels, Gabriel and Michael, about his observations on the curious proceedings of earthly life and the nature of man's religions.

Other short stories in the book include a bedtime story about a family of cats Twain wrote for his daughters, and an essay explaining why an anaconda is morally superior to Man.

+++

[Found online at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letters_from_the_Earth ]

90. Got MEDITATION? Excerpts from "Krishnamurti's Notebook", by J. Krishnamurti

Excerpts
from

"Krishnamurti's Notebook",

by
J. Krishnamurti,

Perennial Library,
1976


October 3rd

The clouds
were magnificent;
the horizon
was filled
with them,
except
in the west
where
the sky was clear.
 
Some
were black,
heavy
with
thunder and rain;
others
were
pure white,
full of light
and
splendor.
 
They were
of
every shape
and size,
delicate,
threatening,
billowy;
they were
piled up
one
against
the other,
with
immense power
and
beauty.
 
They seemed
motionless
but
there was
violent movement
within them
and
nothing
could stop
their
shattering
immensity.
 
A gentle wind
was blowing
from the west,
driving these vast,
mountainous clouds
against the hills;
the hills
were giving shape
to
the clouds
and
they
were moving
with
these clouds
of
darkness and light.
 
The hills
with
their
scattered villages,
were
waiting
for the rains
that were
so long
in coming;
they
would soon be
green again
and
the trees
would soon
lose
their leaves
with
the
coming winter.
 
The road
was straight
with
shapely trees
on
either side
and
the car
was
holding the road
at
great speed,
even
at the curves;
the car
was made
to go fast
and
to
hold the road
and
it was
performing very well
that morning.
 
It was
shaped
for speed,
low,
hugging
the road.
 
We were
too soon
leaving
the country
and
entering
into the town
[Rome]
but
those clouds
were there,
immense,
furious
and
waiting.
 
In the middle
of the night
[at Circeo],
when it was
utterly quiet,
save for
an
occasional hoot
of
an owl
which was calling
without a reply,
in
a little house
in
the woods,
meditation
was
pure delight,
without
a
flutter
of thought,
with
its
endless subtleties;
it was
a movement
that
had
no end
and
every
movement
of
the brain
was still,
watching
from
emptiness.
 
It was
an
emptiness
that
had known
no knowing;
it was
emptiness
that
had known
no space;
it
was empty
of
time.

It was
empty,
past
all
seeing,
knowing
and
being.
 
In this
emptiness
there was
fury;
the
fury
of
a storm,
the fury
of
exploding universe,
the
fury
of
creation
which
could never
have
any
expression.
 
It was
the fury
of
all life,
death
and
love.
 
But yet
it
was empty,
a vast,
boundless
emptiness
which
nothing
could ever
fill,
transform
or
cover up.
 
Meditation
was
the
ecstasy
of
this
emptiness.
 
The subtle
inter-relationship
of
the mind,
the brain
and
the body
is
the
complicated play
of
life.

There
is misery
when one
predominates
over
the other
and
the mind
cannot dominate
the brain
or
the
physical organism;
when there
is
harmony
between
the two,
then
the mind
can
consent
to
abide
with them;
it
is not
a
plaything
of
either.
 
The whole
can
contain
the
particular
but
the
little,
the
part,
can
never
formulate
the whole.
 
It is
incredibly subtle
for
the two
to
live together
in
complete harmony,
without one
or
the other
forcing,
choosing,
dominating.
 
The intellect
can
and
does
destroy
the body
and
the body
with
its dullness,
insensitivity
can
pervert,
bring about
the
deterioration
of
the intellect.
 
The neglect
of
the body
with
its
indulgence
and
demanding
tastes,
with
its
appetites
can
make
the body
heavy
and
insensitive
and
so
make
dull thought.
 
And
thought
becoming
more refined,
more cunning
can
and
does
neglect
the
demands
of
the body
which
then
sets about
to
pervert
thought.
 
A fat,
gross
body
does interfere
with
the
subtleties
of
thought,
and
thought,
escaping
from
the conflicts
and
problems
it
has bred,
does
make
the body
a
perverse
thing.
 
The body
and
the brain
have
to be
sensitive
and
in
harmony
to be
with
the
incredible subtleness
of
the mind
which is
ever explosive
and
destructive.
 
The mind
is
not
a plaything
of
the brain,
whose function
is
mechanical.
 
When
the
absolute necessity
of
complete harmony
of
the brain
and
body
is seen,
then
the brain
will
watch over
the body,
not
dominating it
and
this very
watching
sharpens
the brain
and
makes
the body
sensitive.
 
The
seeing
is
the fact
and
with
the fact
there
is
no bargaining;
it
can be
put aside,
denied,
avoided
but
it
still
remains
a
fact.
 
The
understanding
of
the fact
is
essential
and
not
the
evaluation
of
the fact.
 
When
the fact
is seen,
then
the brain
is
watchful
of
the habits,
the
degenerating factors
of
the body.
 
Then
thought
does not
impose
a discipline
on
the body
nor
control it;
for
discipline,
control
makes for
insensitivity
and
any form
of
insensitivity
is
deterioration,
a
withering away.
 
Again
on waking,
when
there were
no cars
roaring
up the hill
and
the smell
of
a small wood
nearby
was
in the air
and
rain
was
tapping
on
the window,
there was
that
otherness
again
filling
the room;
it
was
intense
and
there was
a
sense
of fury;
it
was
the fury
of
a storm,
of
a full,
roaring river,
the
fury
of
innocency.
 
It was
there
in
the room
with
such abundance
that
every form
of
meditation
came
to
an end
and
the brain
was
looking,
feeling
out
of
its own
emptiness.
 
It lasted
for
considerable time
and
in spite
of
the fury
of
its intensity
or
because
of it.
 
The brain
remained
empty,
full
of
that
otherness.
 
It shattered
everything
that
one
thought of,
that
one
felt
or
saw;
it was
an
emptiness
in
which
nothing
existed.
 
It
was
complete
destruction.
 
+++

89. GOT ATHEISM? Excerpts from "The Stranger", by Albert Camus

Excerpts
from

"The Stranger",

a novel
by
Albert Camus,
1942,

Vintage Press,
p. 95 -99.


[At this point
in the novel,
the "Stranger"
is in prison,
awaiting trial
for the
dream-like
killing
of
an unknown Arab.]
 
And it was then
that the things
I've never
liked
to talk about
began.


Not that they
were
particularly terrible;
I've no wish
to exaggerate
and
I suffered less
than others.
 
Still,
there was one thing
in those early days
that
was really irksome:
my habit
of thinking
like
a free man.
 
For instance,
I would
suddenly be seized
with a desire
to go
down to the beach
for a swim.
 
And
merely
to have imagined
the sound
of ripples at my feet,
the smooth feel
of the water
on my body
as I struck out,
and
the wonderful sensation
of relief
it gave
brought home
still more cruelly
the narrowness
of my cell.
 
Still,
that phase
lasted
a few months
only.
 
Afterward,
I had
prisoner's
thoughts.
 
I waited
for
the daily walk
in the courtyard
or
a visit
from my lawyer.
 
As for
the rest
of the time,
I managed
quite well,
really.
 
I've
often thought
that
had I
been compelled
to live
in
the
trunk of a dead tree,
with nothing to do
but gaze up
at the patch of sky
just overhead,
I'd
have got
used to it
by
degrees.
 
I'd have learned
to watch
for
the passing of birds
or
drifting clouds,
as
I had come
to watch for
my lawyer's
odd neckties,
or
in another world,
to wait
patiently
till Sunday
for
a spell
of love-making
with Marie.
 
Well,
here,
anyhow,
I wasn't
penned
in
a hollow tree trunk.
 
There
were others
in the world
worse off
than I.
 
I remembered
it had been one
of Mother's
pet ideas --
she was
always voicing it --
that
in the long run
one gets used
to anything.
 
Usually,
however,
I didn't think things out
so far.
 
Those first months
were trying,
of course;
but the very effort
I had to make
helped me
through them.
 
For instance,
I
was plagued
by
the desire
for a woman --
which
was natural enough,
considering my age.
 
I never thought
of Marie
especially.
 
I was obsessed
by thoughts
of this woman
or that,
of
all the ones I'd had,
all the circumstances
under which
I'd
loved them;
so much so
that
the cell
grew crowded
with their faces,
ghosts
of my old passions.
 
That
unsettled me,
no doubt;
but,
at least,
it served
to kill time.
 
I gradually
became
quite friendly
with
the chief jailer,
who
went the rounds
with
the kitchen hands
at
mealtimes.
 
It was he
who brought up
the subject
of women.
 
"That's what
the men here
grumble about
most,"
he told me.
 
I said
I felt like that
myself.
 
"There's
something unfair
about it,"

I added,
"like
hitting a man
when
he's down."
 
"But
that's
the whole point
of it,"
he said;
"that's why
you fellows
are
kept in prison."
 
"I don't follow."
 
"Liberty,"
he said,
"means
that.
 
You're
being deprived
of your liberty."
 
It
had never before
struck me
in that light,
but
I saw his point.
 
"That's true,"
I said.
"Otherwise
it wouldn't be
a punishment."
 
The jailer nodded.
 
"Yes,
you're different,
you can use
your brains.
 
The others can't.
 
Still,
those fellows
find a way out;
they do it
by themselves."
 
With which
remark
the jailer
left my cell.
 
Next day
I did
like
the others.
 
The lack
of
cigarettes,
too,
was
a trial.
 
When I
was brought
to
the prison,
they took away
my belt,
my shoelaces,
and
the contents
of my pockets,
including
my cigarettes.
 
Once I
had been given
a cell
to myself
I asked
to be given back,
anyhow,
the cigarettes.
 
Smoking
was
forbidden,
they
informed
me.
 
That,
perhaps,
was what got me down
the most;
in fact,
I suffered
really badly
during
the first few days.
 
I even
tore off
splinters
from my plank bed
and
sucked them.
 
All day long
I felt faint
and bilious.
 
It passed
my
understanding
why
I shouldn't
be allowed
even
to smoke;
it
could have
done
no one
any
harm.
 
Later on,
I understood
the idea behind it;
this privation,
too,
was part
of my punishment.
 
But,
by the time
I understood,
I'd lost
the craving,
so it had ceased
to be
a punishment.
 
Except for
these privations
I wasn't
too unhappy.
 
Yet again,
the
whole problem
was:
how
to
kill time.
 
After a while,
however,
once I'd learned
the
trick
of
remembering things,
I never had
a moment's boredom.
 
Sometimes
I would exercise
my memory
on
my bedroom
and,
starting from a corner,
make the round,
noting
every object I saw
on the way.
 
At first
it was over
in a minute or two.
 
But
each time
I repeated
the
experience,
it took
a little longer.
 
I made
a point
of visualizing
every piece
of furniture,
and
each article upon
or in it,
and then
every detail
of each article,
and finally
the details
of the details,
so to speak;
a tiny dent
or incrustation,
or a chipped edge,
and the exact
grain and color
of
the woodwork.
 
At the same time
I forced myself
to keep
my inventory
in mind
from start to finish,
in the right order
and omitting
no item.
 
With the result that,
after a few weeks,
I could spend hours
merely
in listing the objects
in my bedroom.
 
I found that
the more I thought,
the more details,
half-forgotten
or
malobserved,
floated up
from
my memory.
 
There seemed
no end
to them.
 
So I learned
that
even after
a single day's
experience
of
the
outside world
a man
could easily
live
a hundred years
in prison.
 
He'd have
laid up enough
memories
never
to be
bored.
 
Obviously,
in
one way,
this
was
a
compensation.
 
+++