Tuesday, 13 August 2019

Hyborial Bridge 69




Castaneda had a notion of another world of perception that is hidden by the “factual” one. This hidden world could be the naïve one of physical proportion.


.. as I looked about I saw there was a wonderful well just under the high, steep wall of grass. All the ground round it was covered with bright, green, dripping moss; there was every kind of moss there, moss like beautiful green ferns, and like palms and fir trees, and it was all green as jewellery, and drops of water hung on it like diamonds. And in the middle was the great well, deep and shining and beautiful, so clear that it looked as if I could touch the red sand at the bottom, but it was far below. (The Great God Pan, page 135)


This universe is defined by irregular flow, of water or lines. What you could say is all the lichen and moss you see has scripted routine (of DNA), which is one side of reality. The other is flow, and taken together they express their identity in the world.


Without expression (as Bruce Lee says) there is no independent identity. No free, naturalistic creativity with a sense of cosmic destiny. The naïve world, you could say, is one of destiny, of figures in a landscape, of figures in the sky.


Because it is naïve it also is not the universe of perspective accuracy. That’s not to say there is no perspective. BWS’s “The Enchantment” has perspective but not to an overriding degree.
 
The sweeping curve of the turf and deep waters make quite a weird space, embroidered with blossoms and grasses, even if there is more than a hint of perspective in the flagstones and jetty.
The naïve world is actually full of weird spaces, shifting and twisting animate/inanimate shapes. If this is the expressive world of cosmic destiny (of the cowboy and Indian!) it has a flow that is not to be seen in the straightline mainstream.
The vast perspective illusion hides the real world of naïve proportion, that I think is represented in their various ways by Madame Blavatsky, Arthur Machen, Talbot Mundy, Francis Stevens, Howard and the ethos of Weird Tales .. and Castaneda?
I quoted David Silverman
Field research.. views the culture through a lens.
A lens, though, is also a type of perspective illusion that lets us see an invisible world (Hyborian Bridge 56) There’s nothing wrong with using perspective, as I’ve repeatedly said; it’s only when the world BECOMES perspective that the illusion dominates reality.
You know the quote from Machen’s The White People
..I could see that all the different shapes of the earth were arranged in patterns, something like the grey rocks, only the pattern was different. It was getting late, and the air was indistinct, but it looked from where I was standing something like two great figures of people lying on the grass. (page 138)
The sense one gets is that the strong human shapes are far from crystal clear; there is a vagueness that’s very atmospheric. Where does the vagueness come from? From the interweaving shapes, inanimate ground and animate nature




 
Machrie, Arran
The suggestion of things that might be there is a peculiarity of the flow of line that merges and emerges in the dense tangle of the long, low shadows. It’s not to say either they’re there or they’re not, but the very suggestion is magic. Machen’s images seem to recur in the Narnia chronicles of CS Lewis in the 60s.
A world where not everything is crystal clear, and there is a vagueness, sounds much like the hidden world that is part of the Castaneda mythos. After all, things are only crystal clear in a perspective vision. In terms of shape and pattern things are often suggestive.
Now, in the scientific world of lenses (microscopes and telescopes) this suggestive world doesn’t exist. Nevertheless, in a human body – or in any physique – the jumble of shapes is suggestive of hills and valleys and that type of thing.
So, perspective illusion creates very definite shapes (ie biochemical molecules) but not the subtle hollows and highs of a physique. It’s the very precision of science that is false, and of course very convincing!
What is the undulating vagueness? It’s the flow of line that can’t be precisely measured. Even if precise shapes exist, so does flow and the two together create the expression of a physique, of a place (of magic).
In other words, the very persuasive precision of science is incorrect! Without the flow, the primeval rhythm, there can be no expression, only what “they” call information. It’s the same as saying that we, as homo sapiens, are identical to robots, an artificial, cyborg lifeform.
The way “they” get away with this is by being ultra-precise. But the very precision is robotic. Not only that but incorrect. In order to have precision one must also have imprecision – the atmosphere, the state of being.
 
The Big Pretence Titian was painting the very same hollows and highs of a magical wood as was Machen describing. A description can be precise if the thing being described is imprecise, and that is poetry. An all-precise world couldn’t be described poetically; it would be a living death.
It’s like Nietzsche says, “Without music, life would be a mistake” (Pictorial 27). It’s incorrect to be living in a robotic situation, unless literally forced by circumstances (like, say, Michael Schumacher).
Compare this photo of the Erechtheion (Athens) to BWS’s “The Enchantment”






 
What you see beyond a Greek temple is the other side of reality to monumental idealism. The filigree foliage that is like enlarged lichen. A Greek temple is proportionate order, whereas the surroundings are proportionate disorder. Disorder is the cycle of life that rises and falls, like the sweep of the turf. The theme of “The Enchantment” is the doppelganger on the other shore; the reality that all must face.
To the Greeks, their monuments were appearance, not reality. What you could call a magnificent illusion or, as Howard might have put it, the monuments of Man fade with his conquests.
But a Greek ruin is also a sign of heroic revival. An illusion can only revive in the grand sweep of conquest by nature herself! The Greeks did not live an illusion; they lived for the everlasting revival of nature that is the Dionysia, the theatrical festivities dedicated to the gay god of rustic pursuits.
This world is what you could call the ever shifting, undulating lines of leaves that fall off boughs that soar over hills and stones and moss soft and uneven. The world of disorder that is simply the other side of reality to a Greek temple. The world that existed throughout the Middle Ages and that is easy to identify in Howard’s fantasy descriptions.