To begin at the beginning; with a post script to the previous post!
Just to record an example of astonishing synchronicity on the
Eurostar. In fact, initially, while trying to board. On Monday June 25 St Pancras was Seriously Crowded at the Eurostar terminal; the Paris
train on the previous day had been six hours late and a surplus of
passengers had perforce, spilled over into the Monday. So, with no
immediate entry to Departures, I was wandering alongside a serious
queue towards the distant end when I heard my name. Voila, in the
queue, two English friends bound for Lille so I queue-jumped
shamelessly to join them and catch up. Coincidence enough but more
amazing synchronicity was to come. We were all bound for the same
train, and sitting in the same coach, at the same table.
Unbelievable.
I checked on Jung’s theory of synchronicity which I thought
proposed the concept of underlying, unseen patterns of coincidence
and discovered, perhaps, Too Much Information!! In fact, Carl Jung
had discussed his ideas on those surprising juxtapositions that
scientific knowledge could not rationally explain, with Albert
Einstein before World War One and first used the term,
‘synchronicity’ in a 1930s lecture but the term did not appear in
print until 1960 in his Collected Works, Volume 8.
He proposed that synchronicity be the name for ‘a meaningful
coincidence in time, a psychic factor independent of space and
time.’ He felt that it forced a basic reconsideration of
chance, probability, coincidence and singular events in our lives and
was a revolutionary concept both challenging and complementing the
physicist’s classical view of causality. Oh dear, this is
intellectually deeper than what I thought I knew about Jung’s
concept and impossible to explain and summarise. Nevertheless, the Eurostar experience did feel beyond rational
explanation.
A friend recently passed on a slender book of lyrics and legends of
the American Indian which she had bought in America in the Seventies.
It is a charming celebration of the Indian’s view of himself and
his world, illustrated with examples of American Indian art. The legends are based around
the idea of the Indian as the offspring of Mother Earth and Father
Sky and a deeply-held, core feeling is of the harmony of man with nature. The
Indian reveres the natural world and all its creatures; he carries
the music of his forefathers in his head and is as one with his
universe. The poetry throughout the book is imbued with all the most
important elements of Indian life; love and courtship; war; the
Hunt; the Great Spirit; Beauty and Manhood; legend and myth; prayer and poetry. One long
poem on Persimmon Wine is
typical in its poetic intensity.
Sundown over Little Chief. Sweet is
the And when
the future finds us, let them
sound of silence. There is a
sudden say,
“They were a magic people in
flight of mourning doves. The this
ordinary place.”
sun-lashed rain is catching in
our hair.
(We shall make persimmon wine.
You come!)
(We shall make persimmon wine.
You come!)
The title of this blog is the title of the book:
Walk Quietly The Beautiful Trail. It
comes from a Navajo Benedictory Chant chiefly
a tribute to Beauty, which ends:
Above and below
me hovers the beautiful,
I am surrounded
by it
I am immersed in
it.
In my youth I am
aware of it,
And in old age
I shall walk
quietly
The beautiful
trail.
Although this marvellous little book has
apparently nothing to do with Brugge, nevertheless I realise that it
speaks to me precisely because I am doing just that; attempting to
walk, quietly, the beautiful trail!
Here is a late postscript, nicely rounding off a blog which began with reference to a postscript.
P.S.
P.S.
Looking for an illustration of Red Indian art, I chanced across this beautiful pictogram:
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