FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1537   1538   1539   1540   1541   1542   1543   1544   1545   1546   1547   1548   1549   1550   1551   1552   1553   1554   1555   1556   1557   1558   1559   1560   1561  
1562   1563   1564   1565   1566   1567   1568   1569   1570   1571   1572   1573   1574   1575   1576   1577   1578   1579   1580   1581   1582   1583   1584   1585   1586   >>   >|  
vividly as though it were taking place again that last time I had been with him; I seemed once more to be listening to the calm yet earnest talk ranging over so many topics, politics and government, economics and science and religion. I did not yet grasp the synthesis he had made of them all, but I saw them now all focussed in him elements he had drawn from human lives and human experiences. I think it was then I first felt the quickenings of a new life to be born in travail and pain.... Wearied, yet exalted, I sank down on a stone bench and gazed out at the little island of Santa Cruz afloat on the shimmering sea. I have mentioned my inability to depict the terrible struggle that went on in my soul. It seems strange that Nietzsche--that most ruthless of philosophers to the romantic mind!--should express it for me. "The genius of the heart, from contact with which every man goes away richer, not 'blessed' and overcome,....but richer himself, fresher to himself than before, opened up, breathed upon and sounded by a thawing wind; more uncertain, perhaps, more delicate, more bruised; but full of hopes which as yet lack names, full of a new will and striving, full of a new unwillingness and counterstriving.".... Such was my experience with Hermann Krebs. How keenly I remember that new unwillingness and counter-striving! In spite of the years it has not wholly died down, even to-day.... Almost coincident with these quickenings of which I have spoken was the consciousness of a hunger stronger than the craving for bread and meat, and I began to meditate on my ignorance, on the utter inadequacy and insufficiency of my early education, on my neglect of the new learning during the years that had passed since I left Harvard. And I remembered Krebs's words--that we must "reeducate ourselves." What did I know? A system of law, inherited from another social order, that was utterly unable to cope with the complexities and miseries and injustices of a modern industrial world. I had spent my days in mastering an inadequate and archaic code--why? in order that I might learn how to evade it? This in itself condemned it. What did I know of life? of the shining universe that surrounded me? What did I know of the insect and the flower, of the laws that moved the planets and made incandescent the suns? of the human body, of the human soul and its instincts? Was this knowledge acquired at such cost of labour and life and love by my fello
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1537   1538   1539   1540   1541   1542   1543   1544   1545   1546   1547   1548   1549   1550   1551   1552   1553   1554   1555   1556   1557   1558   1559   1560   1561  
1562   1563   1564   1565   1566   1567   1568   1569   1570   1571   1572   1573   1574   1575   1576   1577   1578   1579   1580   1581   1582   1583   1584   1585   1586   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

quickenings

 

unwillingness

 
striving
 

richer

 

passed

 

learning

 

neglect

 

insufficiency

 

education

 

inadequacy


remembered

 
reeducate
 
Harvard
 

meditate

 
wholly
 
keenly
 

remember

 

counter

 

Almost

 

coincident


system

 

craving

 

stronger

 

spoken

 

consciousness

 

hunger

 

ignorance

 

inherited

 

flower

 
planets

incandescent

 

insect

 
surrounded
 

condemned

 

shining

 
universe
 

labour

 
acquired
 

knowledge

 
instincts

complexities

 

miseries

 

injustices

 
modern
 

unable

 

utterly

 
social
 

vividly

 

industrial

 
archaic