- THE IMPOSSIBLE
-
- Ah! My life as a child, the open road in every weather; I was unnaturally
abstinent, more detached than the best of beggars, proud to have
- no country, no friends-- what stupidity that was!-- and only now I
realize it!
-
- I was right to distrust old men who never lost a chance for a caress,
parasites on the health and cleanliness of our women-- today when
- women are so much a race apart from us.
-
- I was right in everything I distrusted... because I am running away!
-
- I am running away!
-
- I'll explain.
-
- Even yesterday, I kept sighing: "God! There are enough of us damned
down here! I've done time enough already in their ranks. I know
- them all. We always recognize each other; we disgust each other. Charity
is unheard of among us. Still, we're polite; our relations with the
- world are quite correct." Is that surprising? The world! Businessmen
and idiots!-- there's no dishonor in being here-- but the company of
- the elect; how would they receive us? For there are surely people,
happy people, the false elect, since we must be bold or humble to aproach
- them. These are the real elect. No saintly hypocrites, these!
-
- Since I've got back two cents' worth of reason-- how quickly it goes!--
I can see that my troubles come from not realizing soon enough that
- this is the Western World. These Western swamps! Not that light has
paled, form worn out, or movement been misguided.... All right!
- Now my mind wants absolutely to take on itself all the cruel developments
that mind has undergone since the Orient collapsed.... My mind
- demands it!
-
- ...And that's the end of my two cents' worth of reason! The mind is
in control, it insists that I remain in the West. It will have to be silenced
- if I expect it to end as I always wanted to.
-
- I used to say, to hell with martyrs' palms, all beacons of art, the
inventor's pride, the plunderer's frenzy; I expected to return to the Orient
- and to original, eternal wisdom. But this is evidently a dream of depraved
laziness!
-
- And yet I had no intention of trying to escape from modern suffering--
I have no high regard for the bastard wisdom of the Koran. But isn't
- there a very real torment in knowing that since the dawn of that scientific
discovery, Christianity, Man has been making a fool of himself,
- proving what is obvious, puffing with pride as he repeats his proofs...
and living on that alone? This is a subtle, stupid torment-- and this is
- the source of my spiritual ramblings. Nature may well be bored with
it all! Prudhomme was born with Christ.
-
- Isn't it because we cultivate the fog? We swallow fever with our watery
vegetables. And drunkenness! And tobacco! And ignorance! And
- blind faith! Isn't this all a bit far from the thought, the wisdom
of the Orient, the original fatherland? Why have a modern world, if such
- poisons are invented?
-
- Priests and preachers will say: Of course. But you are really referring
to Eden. There is nothing for you in the past hsitory of Oriental
- races.... True enough. It was Eden I meant! How can this purity of
ancient races affect my dream? Philosophers will say: The world has no
- ages; humanity moves from place to place, that's all. You are a Western
man, but quite free to live in your Orient, as old a one as you want.
- .. and to live in it as you like. Don't be a defeatist. Philosophers,
you are part and parcel of your Western world!
-
- Careful, mind. Don't rush madly after salvation. Train yourself! Ah,
science never goes fast enough for us!
-
- But I see that my mind is asleep.
-
- --If it stays wide awake from this moment on, we would soon reach the
truth, which may even now surround us with its weeping angels!...
-
- --If it had been wide awake until this moment, I would have never given
in to degenerate instincts, long ago!...
-
- --If it had always been wide awake, I would be floating in wisdom!...
-
- O Purity! Purity!
-
- In this moment of awakening, I had a vision of purity! Through the
mind we go to God!
-
- What a crippling misfortune!