Lecture
3
		        
              Paradise Lost: The Price of the Passport
		        
                
                  
                 Attributed to the ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus is 
                maybe the most precise and profound metaphor of life one can encounter 
                in so few words. He wrote that we never step into the same river 
                twice. Stop for a moment and think about those words. What do 
                they entail? If you return to the same river bank on the Volga, 
                how is it not the same river? If it is not, what changed? 
                One way to view the statement is that the water constitutes the 
                river-ness of the river, not the banks of the river, 
                and, since the water is ever flowing to the sea, the river has 
                changed. This is certainly one way of expressing the fact that 
                all things are flowing, that we live in a constant flux of change. 
                But there might be another way of seeing the same thing. 
                     Let’s say that we visited 
                the river together last summer and had a picnic there. The time 
                on the river is the culmination of great conversation, of getting 
                to know one another for the first time. The hours spent there 
                watching the sun go down and the sky light up with the cloudy 
                fire of sunset seem to italicize everything good about budding 
                friendships and human communities. Soon the time to leave arrives 
                and we part ways in the night, remembering every thing about the 
                time. A year passes and we make plans to meet again, reenacting 
                the events of the first summer. We even plan to end on the same 
                note, picnicking on the Volga. Do you suppose that you will be 
                able to have the same experience, even when all the people participating 
                are the same? Even if the weather is exactly the same, the food 
                and drink the same? What changed in the intervening year? Of course, 
                you changed. There is no going back to the same place, because 
                we cannot go back to the past. 
                     Great literature frequently entails 
                stories about the passing of time and the effects the ensuing 
                experiences have on the characters. These stories are not all 
                tragedies either. Yet the passing of time means a loss of those 
                moments that make up the present, where we live our lives. Let 
                me tell you about two of the oldest stories in literature.
                     The ancient epic of Gilgamesh, a 
                story dating back to the third millenium B.C. of Babylon, and 
                the earliest epic of the West, tells the story of Gilgamesh, half 
                god, half man and his friendship with Enkidu, half man, half animal. 
                Before the two meet is a time of innocence, before love and loyalty, 
                before death and their final parting. They become friends and 
                then immediately set out on an adventure, meeting with evil, overcoming 
                fear and loneliness on the way to their ultimate meeting with 
                death. Gilgamesh has learned what love is, and what the price 
                of love is. It costs him everything, but in the end, he knows 
                he would pay the price all over. The story is told with all the 
                inevitability of an enduring myth, the stories that lie at the 
                heart of the human experience. 
                     The other early story is not so 
                old, but set in a Garden made by God for Man. The first man and 
                the woman are innocent. They are untouched by loss. They lack 
                experience. After breaking the one law they are given, they enter 
                into a new period, suffering the loss of home, the loss of innocence, 
                but they gain the world. It is not the same world they inhabited 
                before, it is the human world of love and pain and loss. In these 
                stories there is no going back. The Paradise of inexperience is 
                permanently lost. 
                     Other losses are recounted in literature, 
                and one of the most intense is the loss of innocence that war 
                brings on. The opening of The Iliad is full of exuberance 
                even after ten years of siege against Troy. The men are hopeful 
                and ever plotting. Of course, there are those who would just as 
                well go home without having victory, but for the most part the 
                captains of the Greeks, Achilles, Agamemnon, Diomedes, Odysseus, 
                they are all most happy to let the war continue. For it is in 
                the fight, confronting death, that they believe they will win 
                glory immortal. 
                
                     But later, in The Odyssey, 
                one of the great generals of that war recounts the overwhelming 
                sacrifices made to win. Here is where the story picks up, with 
                the Telemachy. The 20 year old son of Odysseus has decided to 
                find his father whom he cannot remember. He knows that Odysseus 
                is a hero, for he has heard all the stories over the 20 years 
                that Odysseus was gone. He, too, thinks that exploiting a place, 
                an opportunity will allow him to live on forever. But this is 
                not the lesson that he learns in his brief search.
              The 
                Odyssey, Homer. Books 3 and 4
                www.bartleby.com/111/chapman16.html
                 
                     First he travels to Pylos where 
                he meets the great old general Nestor. He wants to find out all 
                about his father. But what he hears about is much more than that. 
                Nestor cannot speak long about the war. For him, it was the defining 
                time of his life. He and all the others who fought there know 
                that life will never be the same, no matter what the outcome was. 
                What is the general lesson that Telemachus learned from this visit 
                to Nestor.
                     Later, he travels to Sparta to meet 
                with Menelaus and his famous wife and the cause of the war, the 
                beautiful Helen of Troy. What does he come away with there? What 
                is the tone of these visits? What could Homer want to teach us 
                about “never stepping into the same river twice?” 
                Was it worth it in the end to fight the war?
                
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