So. Begin when all the rest had left behind them headlong death in battle or at sea…
Yah, yah. Okay. We are going to be gentle with the grandiosity, yes? Because it is at once fragile and formidable. Go carefully. It’s okay. Every man in his own mind gets to play Odysseus, no?
But at the moment, last night and this morning, I seem to be completely unstrung. A guitar turned into a not very useful percussion instrument: all you can do is thump on it. It’s a sound, I guess. But it’s not what guitars are meant for.
Now. A day is too precious a thing to throw away. Take council: take council, my Lord.
All right then. I call the Sun who walks all day through Heaven.
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Sun: I am here, in plain fact. You do have to call me, though. I can’t come on my own. To call me a god is a bit of an extravagance. Divine, perhaps. Immortal, possibly. But the distance between me and the Yahweh who created the heavens and the earth is much much farther than the distance between you and me, between any of you and me. So you have to call me, not because I have some weird celestial fetish, of “wanting to be asked,” but just because I can’t come, I can’t even be, without a call. Enough. Tell me what is worrying you. Anyone?
Ghost: what if it all comes apart next week? What if sex is the thing that unravels everything? It has been before.
Sun: it has always been the most undigested thing, maybe. Despite, or because of our focus on it. It’s hard to look directly at it and see it clearly. But come. What could unravel?
Ghost: Freud hovers here: the fear I guess partly at least is that all our motives are really disguised versions of wanting soft-focus Cindy from the March 1971 Oui Magazine, and we don’t want anything else, and everything – God, beauty, justice – is just crap I fiddle with because I can’t have Cindy.
Lieutenant: Cindy who crouched by the stream and smiled at us, as if she saw us, as if she knew us, and all would be well.
Captain: somewhere there was, or there would come to be, a country where we were at home and all the seventeen year old girls were mature adults who loved us.
Rat: and would trace divine characters on our flesh with slender fingers.
Ghost: I mean, yes, it resonates all the way forward with Tolkien’s Galadriel. The roots of this are deeper than any of ours.
Captain: But MY job was going to be to make the divine earthly and the earthly divine, right? I was going to make it all happen.
Lieutenant: Except that we were a pudgy, easily confused eleven year old boy, yes. I guess thirteen by the time we were gazing at Cindy, and mistaking some photographer’s vision for a vision of reality. So we stepped sideways into fantasy, when we could.
Sun: which was the right thing to do, at the time, and not to be scoffed at. Losing everything we wanted and aspired to would have been much much worse. It was a way of preserving things that were threatened by the reality of Springfield, and bullies, and people who weren’t interested in anything difficult to understand. We do still live on the outskirts of a brutal and uncomprehending people. We still rely daily on certain deceptions and elisions. Dear friends we are still spies, in important senses, and always will be. It’s not that we’ve arrived in paradise and can lay our burdens down. I’m sorry: I wish it were: but we are still in the thick of it.
Rat: But we need not any longer pretend to anyone near and dear that the case is any different than that. And the poor Captain here need not complete the repair of the world within ten business days. We have our eighteen years (if we have them) and I at least want us to get along and help each other.
Ghost: is what we have enough?
Sun: to make us live forever in the golden sunlight of the new Atlantis? No. We will die, we are dying now, and we will vanish entirely, But we have answers to all that. And right now I think we are more distracted, and confused, than we are confronting mortality. We are absorbing a lot of Martha’s anxiety, for one thing. Another instance of second-hand smoke. We don’t need to be worried about this trip, either for her or for us.
Ghost: Well you know, what it is, is grief: grief at all the waste of days, all the hiding and sneaking, all the time spent under the domination of Ahriman. Grief and anger. It’s nobody’s fault, really, but such a life of loss! So much skulking. And we are still skulking, and we’re tired of it, and we’re afraid that at the very worst moment we’ll suddenly break everything for no reason and every reason. Because…. It shouldn’t have been this way. It shouldn’t be this way.
Sun: yes. I can’t fix this, you know. I can’t make the world other than it is.
Ghost: [grins] No. No, and we’re like those disappointed Christians who are so angry at God for not existing.
Sun: But what we can do… is not blame each other for the way of the world, not expect each other either to make it right or to make us fit comfortably in it. The problem is not that we are in rebellion against the world. The problem indeed is that we are not resolute and cohesive enough in our rebellion, Not committed enough to it. We hide for good reasons. The hostility of the world is not a figment our our imagination, which will vanish when achieve an adult vision. We need to pull together and really be on our own side, wholeheartedly, though. And we can do that. And we can both do that and grieve, and honor the struggle, and have compassion for the times we have been defeated and caved in and let ourselves down and let others down. We can do both those things. In fact, we have to do both those things, they are actually the same thing.
Ghost: …. Actually the same thing. I’ve traveled a long way to come and hear that.
Sun: A very long way. This has not been easy, and it’s not going to be easy. But take your seat with us, here. We need you.