Time, Twilight, and Eternity. Thom Rock

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Time, Twilight, and Eternity - Thom Rock страница 3

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
Time, Twilight, and Eternity - Thom Rock

Скачать книгу

      Begin with revolution: Twenty-four hours, a measure of time, a day.

      Multiply by 365.242199, the time it takes for the blue planet to make one complete circuit around the star and we get a year—time past, time present, time future—begin here: with the distance and duration of stars, the transit and timelessness of light. How everything depends on the tilt, the spin, the orbit—the circling around, irrevocably bound to each other.

      And on spinning through space so fast we don’t even know we are moving.

      II.

      Or begin with the end in which is our beginning, no “before” or “after” and yet we are born and we live and we die. Begin with the ancient light that reaches our eyes from our next nearest star which, being so many light-years away, will have left that sun more than four years ago—a star-beam reaching back in space more than twenty-five trillion miles.

      Wherever we look we look backward in time: what was, what might have been. Time does not pass . . .

      We do.

      We know time only from the fleeting flight of things. Time doesn’t simply fall like sand through an hourglass, we sieve it like powdered sugar dusted over flaked memories. Every breath and every moment is an end and a beginning; every person an epigraph and epitaph and that—that is where we start.

      And where we depart . . .

      Begin with us turned around just so, always looking over our shoulders, eternally saying goodbye. We are put here a little while that we may learn to bear the light of love, the Romantics declared. But we love what vanishes; it is time’s ineluctable beams we cannot bear. The bygone days of days gone by, time gone by. Time irretrievable, irredeemable—time since, time without—time then and there . . .

      And then again.

      Begin with the brevity of—the urgency of—life. Begin with trajectory.

      Begin with the fire of time in which we burn.

      III.

      Or begin with the sky on fire, begin with a word: sunset—another: gloaming. A bouquet of time arranged just so, a vase full of evening: sprays of starlight, night branches, a sprig of sunshine.

      A single long-stemmed moment.

      A perfect blue hour where we measure space with our hearts and love is that measure, where time is elastic and our passions expand it—time present, time immemorial.

      Four o’Clocks ticking out their fragrance. Moonflowers and starflowers and morning glories clutching and clinging—their curling tendrils, their vining stems pulling them up to the light. A sunflower: its golden face chasing after the burning transit of a distant star in the sky. The blue gentian and forget-me-nots whispering pure words from the mountain-slopes of another time, another place.

      Van Gogh arranging twilight in a sky blue vase:

      Still / Life (the clutch, the cling)

      Begin here, begin now. Begin always.

      The Hours

      We take the tick or digital sweep of the clock for granted, but long before it reigned over a global marketplace or became the tyrannical ruler of our time-torn lives it is today, the clock was a simple call to community and prayer. Before we ever gave time a face, sticks of incense and strings of beads fragrantly kept track of our holy moments as they measured the length of our prayers, and therefore our hours. They still do in ashrams, temples, and churches around the world. But this measure of time contained too much variability; tempo and cadence could easily skew any prayerful hour. More precise timekeeping could be found in the waning wax of a burning candle, or the steady drops of dripping water, or even grains of sands through the narrow opening of an “hourglass.” While abstract time—invisible, intangible, immaterial—was far from concrete, we quickly learned that it cast an overarching shadow over all of our days nevertheless. The lengthening or shortening shadows cast by a perpendicular rod, spike, or pin set in the sun more reliably measured the day-lit hours.

      Telling time by shadows was all well and good by the light of day, but what about when there was no source of illumination, when everything was shadow? When the shadows were breathing down our necks from all around?

      Facing Time

      Perhaps our earliest ancestors hoped the dark hours didn’t count, but the perennial problem was how to accurately keep track of prayer time through the night. Beyond the command to “pray always” (1 Thess 5:16–18; Eph 6:18), there were times when it was good to know what time it was, even if it was in the middle of the night. Whoever had the night watch, though, more often than not failed to keep his eyes open and the community inevitably and unknowingly slept through the hours—and their prayers—in the dark.

      The first clocks had no hands at all, as their sole function was simply to remind monks to pray always, day and night. Only eventually did we lend time a hand—and only one—to mark the hours. The first minute hand didn’t show up on clock faces until sometime in the sixteenth century, gaining greater popularity almost a century after that when the corrective and steady swing of the pendulum regulator was added to most clockworks. Obsessed as we are nowadays over speed and seconds, our ancestors seemed relatively unconcerned with those slimmest divisions of time. The thin line of the second hand didn’t show up on clock faces until much later in the day.

      The ubiquitous clock’s religious beginnings are ironic: intended to assist the monastic in moving beyond time, the clock ultimately took the eternal and made of it something temporal; bound timelessness to time itself. Meant to mark time for worshiping God, the pendulum gradually swung the other way and the clock became a god itself to be worshiped. The word “clock” echoes out from the Medieval Latin clocca and the Old French cloque to even earlier words that all meant “bell.” The endless chime of time has always called to those that listen. The only reason any hour strikes any number on any clock at all is that the passing of time has for so long been associated with the reverberating sound of mallet against metal.

      Because the lives of committed monastics included praying at fixed times day and night, they invented the ceaselessly ticking, tolling machines that we now take for granted, but upon which the monks depended to govern the consistent ringing of the clocca, or prayer bells. When the monastery

Скачать книгу