Raymond C. Booth |
LXXII.
If all rivers are sweet,
where does the sea get its salt?
How do the seasons know
they must change their shirt?
Why so slowly in winter
and later with such a rapid shudder?
And how do the roots know
they must climb towards the light?
And then greet the air
with so many flowers and colors?
Is it always the same spring
who revives her role?
Pablo Neruda
The best questions are the first questions. Child questions.
Wonder questions. “Why is the sky blue?” The remarkable thing about that
question is that the child is aware that the sky could have been a colour other than blue. It seems as if we
adults lose the ability to think this way. Like in the fantasy books where children
experience magic, but forget it as they get older. That always makes me sad.
Why do we forget? Is it possible that this magic can return as we get
older/wiser? I remember my university professor saying that the story arc goes
from Innocence to Experience to Experience + Innocence, and that the last was
best of all because it was Innocence that cannot be taken away. Neruda’s
question poems remind me of that. These are Musing and Marvelling Questions rather
than Requiring-an-Answer Questions. Child-like without being childish. Here is
acknowledgement of mystery, of puzzles, of possibilities; awareness that things
could have been another way, and a sense of wonder that they are the way they
are. Neruda’s questions give me hope that we jaded, cynical, so-called “realists”
simply haven’t reached the age of Wonder Wisdom yet. So here’s to the return of wonder! And God
help us on our way.
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