Another thoughtful essay Bryce. I am compelled by the idea of seeing ourselves in the middle of the hierarchy rather than on top. That fits with my experience of living on the Maine coast, where nature is more uncontrollable, and must be taken seriously. Also, the subtle dangers of searching for "pure nature." Romanticism was a necessary reaction to rationalism, but has also contributed to excessive individualism as we all search for our own personal truth rather than a shared truth. Thanks for the footnotes as well.
As always, Bryce brings to mind as much good thought as he shares. Here, among other gems: Bryce writes, "to be 'pure,' the modern assumption goes, neither law nor nature needs tending. As a result, both law and nature have become humanity’s playthings." This brings to mind (1) Molière (17th c.): "It takes a lot of work to be natural." (2) Goethe: "One must learn nature by heart to appear natural." And, (3) True beauty requires effort and kindness - Audrey Hepburn loved a poem that was read at her funeral, attributed to her but actually written by an American humorist (apparently, she started quoting it when asked for "beauty tips"): "For attractive lips, speak words of kindness. For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people. For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. For beautiful hair, let a child run his fingers through it once a day. For poise, walk with the knowledge you'll never walk alone." Beauty is not naturally pure; like purity it takes doing. - Thanks again, Bryce!
William, thank you. I wasn't familiar with any of these quotes. Well, I think I've heard of Molière's, but I didn't associate it with him. The "beauty tips" poem really does mix nature (beauty) and artifice (character and charity). Excellent. This is exactly my sentiment about every post you write: "As always, Bryce brings to mind as much good thought as he shares." I'm humbled to know that the feeling is mutual.
Another thoughtful essay Bryce. I am compelled by the idea of seeing ourselves in the middle of the hierarchy rather than on top. That fits with my experience of living on the Maine coast, where nature is more uncontrollable, and must be taken seriously. Also, the subtle dangers of searching for "pure nature." Romanticism was a necessary reaction to rationalism, but has also contributed to excessive individualism as we all search for our own personal truth rather than a shared truth. Thanks for the footnotes as well.
Todd, thanks. I couldn't agree more with all of your points, too.
As always, Bryce brings to mind as much good thought as he shares. Here, among other gems: Bryce writes, "to be 'pure,' the modern assumption goes, neither law nor nature needs tending. As a result, both law and nature have become humanity’s playthings." This brings to mind (1) Molière (17th c.): "It takes a lot of work to be natural." (2) Goethe: "One must learn nature by heart to appear natural." And, (3) True beauty requires effort and kindness - Audrey Hepburn loved a poem that was read at her funeral, attributed to her but actually written by an American humorist (apparently, she started quoting it when asked for "beauty tips"): "For attractive lips, speak words of kindness. For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people. For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. For beautiful hair, let a child run his fingers through it once a day. For poise, walk with the knowledge you'll never walk alone." Beauty is not naturally pure; like purity it takes doing. - Thanks again, Bryce!
William, thank you. I wasn't familiar with any of these quotes. Well, I think I've heard of Molière's, but I didn't associate it with him. The "beauty tips" poem really does mix nature (beauty) and artifice (character and charity). Excellent. This is exactly my sentiment about every post you write: "As always, Bryce brings to mind as much good thought as he shares." I'm humbled to know that the feeling is mutual.