The
Desert
By Aldous Huxley
Boundlessness and emptiness -- these
are the two most expressive symbols of that attributeless Godhead,
of whom all that can be said is St. Bernard's Nescio nescio
or the Vedantist's "not this, not this." The Godhead, says
Meister Eckhart, must be loved "as not-God, not-Spirit, not-person,
not-image, must be loved as He is, a sheer pure absolute One, sundered
from all twoness, and in whom we must eternally sink from nothingness
to nothingness." In the scriptures of Northern and Far Eastern
Buddhism the spatial metaphors recur again and again. At the moment
of death, writes the author of Bardo Thodol, "all things
are like the cloudless sky; and the naked immaculate Intellect is
like unto a translucent void without circumference or center."
"The great Way," in Sosan's words, "is perfect, like
unto vast space, with nothing wanting, nothing superfluous."
"Mind," says Hui-neng (and he is speaking of that universal
ground of consciousness, from which all beings, the unenlightened
no less than the enlightened, take their source), "mind is like
emptiness of space. . . Space contains sun, moon, stars, the great
earth, with its mountains and rivers. . . Good men and bad men, good
things and bad things, heaven and hell -- they are all in empty space.
The emptiness of Self-nature is in all people just like this."
The theologians argue, the dogmatists declaim their credos; but their
propositions "stand in no intrinsic relation to my inner light.
This Inner Light" (I quote from Yoka Dashi's "Song of Enlightenment")
"can be likened to space; it knows no boundaries; yet it is always
here, is always with us, always retains its serenity and fullness.
. . You cannot take hold of it, and you cannot get rid of it; it goes
on its own way. You speak and it is silent; you remain silent, and
it speaks."
Silence is the cloudless heaven perceived
by another sense. Like space and emptiness, it is a natural symbol
of the divine. In the Mithraic mysteries, the candidate for initiation
was told to lay a finger to his lips and whisper: "Silence! Silence!
Silence -- symbol of the living imperishable God!" And long before
the coming of Christianity to the Thebaid, there had been Egyptian
mystery religions, for whose followers God was a well of life, "closed
to him who speaks, but open to the silent." The Hebrew scriptures
are eloquent almost to excess; but even here, among the splendid rumblings
of prophetic praise and impetration and anathema, there are occasional
references to the spiritual meaning and the therapeutic virtues of
silence. "Be still, and know that I am God." "The Lord
is in his holy temple; let all the world keep silence before him."
"Keep thou silence at the presence of the Lord God." The
desert, after all, began within a few miles of the gates of Jerusalem.
The facts of silence and emptiness are
traditionally the symbols of divine immanence -- but not, of course,
for everyone, and not in all circumstances. "Until one has crossed
a barren desert, without food or water, under a burning tropical sun,
at three miles an hour, one can form no conception of what misery
is." These are the words of a gold-seeker, who took the southern
route to California in 1849. Even when one is crossing it at seventy
miles an hour on a four-lane highway, the desert can seem formidable
enough. To the forty-niners it was unmitigated hell. Men and women
who are at her mercy find it hard to see in Nature and her works any
symbols but those of brute power at the best and, at the worst, of
an obscure and mindless malice. The desert's emptiness and the desert's
silence reveal what we may call their spiritual meanings only to those
who enjoy some measure of physiological security. The security may
amount to no more than St. Anthony's hut and daily ration of bread
and vegetables, no more than Milarepa's cave and barley meal and boiled
nettles -- less than what any sane economist would regard as the indispensable
minimum, but still security, still a guarantee of organic life and,
along with life, of the possibility of spiritual liberty and transcendental
happiness.
But even for those who enjoy security
against the assaults of the environment, the desert does not always
or inevitably reveal its spiritual meanings. The early Christian hermits
retired to the Thebaid because its air was purer, because there were
fewer distractions, because God seemed nearer there than in the world
of men. But, alas, dry places are notoriously the abode of unclean
spirits, seeking rest and finding it not. If the immanence of God
was sometimes more easily discoverable in the desert, so also, and
all too frequently, was the immanence of the devil. St. Anthony's
temptations have become a legend, and Cassian speaks of "the
tempests of imagination" through which every newcomer to the
eremitic life had to pass. Solitude, he writes, makes men feel "the
many-winged folly of their souls. . .; they find the perpetual silence
intolerable, and those whom no labor on the land could weary, are
vanquished by doing nothing and worn out by the long duration of their
peace." Be still, and know that I am God; be still,
and know that you are the delinquent imbecile who snarls
and gibbers in the basement of every human mind. The desert can drive
men mad, but it can also help them to become supremely sane.
The enormous drafts of emptiness and
silence prescribed by the eremites are safe medicine only for a few
exceptional souls. By the majority the desert should be taken either
dilute or, if at full strength, in small doses. Used in this way,
it acts as a spiritual restorative, as an anti-hallucinant, as a de-tensioner
and alterative.
In his book, The Next Million Years,
Sir Charles Darwin looks forward to thirty thousand generations of
ever more humans pressing ever more heavily on ever dwindling resources
and being killed off in ever increasing numbers by famine, pestilence
and war. He may be right. Alternatively, human ingenuity may somehow
falsify his predictions. But even human ingenuity will find it hard
to circumvent arithmetic. On a planet of limited area, the more people
there are, the less vacant space there is bound to be. Over and above
the material and sociological problems of increasing population, there
is a serious psychological problem. In a completely home-made environment,
such as is provided by any great metropolis, it is as hard to remain
sane as it is in a completely natural environment such as the desert
or the forest. O Solitude, where are thy charms? But, O Multitude,
where are thine! The most wonderful thing about America is
that, even in these middle years of the twentieth century, there are
so few Americans. By taking a certain amount of trouble you might
still be able to get yourself eaten by a bear in the state of New
York. And without any trouble at all you can get bitten by a rattler
in the Hollywood hills, or die of thirst, while wandering through
an uninhabited desert, within a hundred and fifty miles of Los Angeles.
A short generation ago you might have wandered and died within only
a hundred miles of Los Angeles. Today the mounting tide of humanity
has oozed through the intervening canyons and spilled out into the
wide Mojave. Solitude is receding at the rate of four and a half kilometers
per annum.
And yet, in spite of it all, the silence
persists. For this silence of the desert is such that casual sounds,
and even the systematic noise of civilization, cannot abolish it.
They coexist with it -- as small irrelevances at right angles to an
enormous meaning, as veins of something analogous to darkness within
an enduring transparency. From the irrigated land come the dark gross
sounds of lowing cattle, and above them the plovers trail their vanishing
threads of shrillness. Suddenly, startlingly, out of the sleeping
sagebrush there bursts the shrieking of coyotes -- Trio for Ghoul
and Two Damned Souls. On the trunks of cottonwood trees, on the wooden
walls of barns and houses, the woodpeckers rattle away like pneumatic
drills. Picking one's way between the cactuses and the creosote bushes
one hears, like some tiny whirring clockwork, the soliloquies of invisible
wrens, the calling, at dusk, of the nightjays and even occasionally
the voice of Homo sapiens -- six of the species in a parked Chevrolet,
listening to the broadcast of a prize fight, or else in pairs necking
to the delicious accompaniment of Crosby. But the light forgives,
the distances forget, and this great crystal of silence, whose base
is as large as Europe and whose height, for all practical purposes,
is infinite, can coexist with things of a far higher order of discrepancy
than canned sentiment or vicarious sport. Jet planes, for example
-- the stillness is so massive that it can absorb even jet planes.
The screaming crash mounts to its intolerable climax and fades again,
mounts as another of the monsters rips through the air, and once more
diminishes and is gone. But even at the height of the outrage the
mind can still remain aware of that which surrounds it, that which
preceded and will outlast it.
Progress, however, is on the march.
Jet planes are already as characteristic of the desert as are Joshua
trees or burrowing owls; they will soon be almost as numerous. The
wilderness has entered the armament race, and will be in it to the
end. In its multi-million-acred emptiness there is room enough to
explode atomic bombs and experiment with guided missiles. The weather,
so far as flying is concerned, is uniformly excellent, and in the
plains lie the flat beds of many lakes, dry since the last Ice Age,
and manifestly intended by Providence for hot-rod racing and jets.
Huge airfields have already been constructed. Factories are going
up. Oases are turning into industrial towns. In brand-new Reservations,
surrounded by barbed wire and the FBI, not Indians but tribes of physicists,
chemists, metallurgists, communication engineers and mechanics are
working with the co-ordinated frenzy of termites. From their air-conditioned
laboratories and machine shops there flows a steady stream of marvels,
each one more expensive and each more fiendish than the last. The
desert silence is still there; but so, ever more noisily, are the
scientific irrelevancies. Give the boys in the reservations a few
more years and another hundred billion dollars, and they will succeed
(for with technology all things are possible) in abolishing the silence,
in transforming what are now irrelevancies into the desert's fundamental
meaning. Meanwhile, and luckily for us, it is noise which is exceptional;
the rule is still this crystalline symbol of universal Mind.
The bulldozers roar, the concrete is
mixed and poured, the jet planes go crashing through the air, the
rockets soar aloft with their cargoes of white mice and electronic
instruments. And yet for all this, "nature is never spent; there
lives the dearest freshness deep down things."
And not merely the dearest, but the
strangest, the most wonderfully unlikely. I remember, for example,
a recent visit to one of the new Reservations. It was in the spring
of 1952 and, after seven years of drought, the rains of the preceding
winter had been copious. From end to end the Mojave was carpeted with
flowers -- sunflowers, and the dwarf phlox, chicory and coreopsis,
wild hollyhock and all the tribe of garlics and lilies. And then,
as we neared the Reservation, the flower carpet began to move. We
stopped the car, we walked into the desert to take a closer look.
On the bare ground, on every plant and bush innumerable caterpillars
were crawling. They were of two kinds -- one smooth, with green and
white markings, and a horn, like that of a miniature rhinoceros, growing
out of its hinder end. The caterpillar, evidently, of one of the hawk
moths. Mingled with these, in millions no less uncountable, were the
brown hairy offspring of (I think) the Painted Lady butterfly. They
were everywhere -- over hundreds of square miles of the desert. And
yet, a year before, when the eggs from which these larvae had emerged
were laid, California had been as dry as a bone. On what, then, had
the parent insects lived? And what had been the food of their innumerable
offspring? In the days when I collected butterflies and kept their
young in glass jars on the window sill of my cubicle at school, no
self-respecting caterpillar would feed on anything but the leaves
to which its species had been predestined. Puss moths laid their eggs
on poplars, spurge hawks on spurges; mulleins were frequented by the
gaily piebald caterpillars of one rather rare and rigidly fastidious
moth. Offered an alternative diet, my caterpillars would turn away
in horror. They were like orthodox Jews confronted by pork or lobsters;
they were like Brahmins at a feast of beef prepared by Untouchables.
Eat? Never. They would rather die. And if the right food were not
forthcoming, die they did. But these caterpillars of the desert were
apparently different. Crawling into irrigated regions, they had devoured
the young leaves of entire vineyards and vegetable gardens. They had
broken with tradition, they had flouted the immemorial taboos. Here,
near the Reservation, there was no cultivated land. These hawk moth
and Painted Lady caterpillars, which were all full grown, must have
fed on indigenous growths -- but which, I could never discover; for
when I saw them the creatures were all crawling at random, in search
either of something juicier to eat or else of some place to spin their
cocoons. Entering the Reservation, we found them all over the parking
lot and even on the steps of the enormous building which housed the
laboratories and the administrative offices. The men on guard only
laughed or swore. But could they be absolutely sure? Biology
has always been the Russians' strongest point. These innumerable crawlers
-- perhaps they were Soviet agents? Parachuted from the stratosphere,
impenetrably disguised, and so thoroughly indoctrinated, so completely
conditioned by means of post-hypnotic suggestions that even under
torture it would be impossible for them to confess, even under DDT.
. .
Our party showed its pass and entered.
The strangeness was no longer Nature's; it was strictly human. Nine
and a half acres of floor space, nine and a half acres of the most
extravagant improbability. Sagebrush and wild flowers beyond the windows;
but here, within, machine tools capable of turning out anything from
a tank to an electron microscope; million-volt X-ray cameras; electric
furnaces; wind tunnels; refrigerated vacuum tanks; and on either side
of endless passages closed doors bearing inscriptions which had obviously
been taken from last year's science fiction magazines. (This year's
space ships, of course, have harnessed gravitation and magnetism.)
ROCKET DEPARTMENT, we read on door after door. ROCKET AND EXPLOSIVES
DEPARTMENT, ROCKET PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT. And what lay behind the unmarked
doors? Rockets and Canned Tularemia? Rockets and Nuclear Fission?
Rockets and Space Cadets? Rockets and Elementary Courses in Martian
Language and Literature?
It was a relief to get back to the caterpillars.
Ninety-nine point nine recurring per cent of the poor things were
going to die -- but not for an ideology, not while doing their best
to bring death to other caterpillars, not to the accompaniment of
Te Deums, of Dulce et decorums, of "We shall
not sheathe the sword, which we have not lightly drawn, until. . ."
Until what? The only completely unconditional surrender will come
when everybody -- but everybody -- is a corpse.
For modern man, the really blessed thing
about Nature is its otherness. In their anxiety to find a cosmic basis
for human values, our ancestors invented an emblematic botany, a natural
history composed of allegories and fables, an astronomy that told
fortunes and illustrated the dogmas of revealed religion. "In
the Middle Ages," writes Émile Mâle, "the idea
of a thing which a man formed for himself, was always more real than
the thing itself. . . The study of things for their own sake held
no meaning for the thoughtful man. . . The task for the student of
nature was to discover the eternal truth which God would have each
thing express." These eternal truths expressed by things were
not the laws of physical and organic being -- laws discoverable only
by patient observation and the sacrifice of preconceived ideas and
autistic urges; they were the notions and fantasies engendered in
the minds of logicians, whose major premises, for the most part, were
other fantasies and notions bequeathed to them by earlier writers.
Against the belief that such purely verbal constructions were eternal
truths, only the mystics protested; and the mystics were concerned
only with that "obscure knowledge," as it was called, which
comes when a man "sees all in all." But between the real
but obscure knowledge of the mystic and the clear but unreal knowledge
of the verbalist, lies the clearish and realish knowledge of the naturalist
and the man of science. It was knowledge of a kind which most of our
ancestors found completely uninteresting.
Reading the older descriptions of God's
creatures, the older speculations about the ways and workings of Nature,
we start by being amused. But the amusement soon turns to the most
intense boredom and a kind of mental suffocation. We find ourselves
gasping for breath in a world where all the windows are shut and everything
"wears man's smudge and shares man's smell." Words are the
greatest, the most momentous of all our inventions, and the specifically
human realm is the realm of language. In the stifling universe of
medieval thought, the given facts of Nature were treated as the symbols
of familiar notions. Words did not stand for things; things stood
for pre-existent words. This is a pitfall which, in the natural sciences,
we have learned to avoid. But in other contexts than the scientific
-- in the context, for example, of politics -- we continue to take
our verbal symbols with the same disastrous seriousness as was displayed
by our crusading and persecuting ancestors. For both parties, the
people on the other side of the Iron Curtain are not human beings,
but merely the embodiments of the pejorative phrases coined by propagandists.
Nature is blessedly non-human; and insofar
as we belong to the natural order, we too are blessedly non-human.
The otherness of caterpillars, as of our own bodies, is an otherness
underlain by a principal identity. The non-humanity of wild flowers,
as of the deepest levels of our own minds, exists within a system
which includes and transcends the human. In the given realm of the
inner and outer not-self, we are all one. In the home-made realm of
symbols we are separate and mutually hostile partisans. Thanks to
words, we have been able to rise above the brutes; and thanks to words,
we have often sunk to the level of the demons. Our statesmen have
tried to come to an international agreement on the use of atomic power.
They have not been successful. And even if they had, what then? No
agreement on atomic power can do any lasting good, unless it be preceded
by an agreement on language. If we make a wrong use of nuclear fission,
it will be because we have made a wrong use of the symbols, in terms
of which we think about ourselves and other people. Individually and
collectively, men have always been the victims of their own words;
but, except in the emotionally neutral field of science, they have
never been willing to admit their linguistic ineptitude, and correct
their mistakes. Taken too seriously, symbols have motivated and justified
all the horrors of recorded history. On every level from the personal
to the international, the letter kills. Theoretically we know this
very well. In practice, nevertheless, we continue to commit the suicidal
blunders to which we have become accustomed.
The caterpillars were still on the march
when we left the Reservation, and it was half an hour or more, at
a mile a minute, before we were clear of them. Among the phloxes and
the sunflowers, millions in the midst of hundreds of millions, they
proclaimed (along with the dangers of over-population) the strength,
the fecundity, the endless resourcefulness of life. We were in the
desert, and the desert was blossoming, the desert was crawling. I
had not seen anything like it since that spring day, in 1948, when
we had been walking at the other end of the Mojave, near the great
earthquake fault, down which the highway descends to San Bernardino
and the orange groves. The elevation here is around four thousand
feet and the desert is dotted with dark clumps of juniper. Suddenly,
as we moved through the enormous emptiness, we became aware of an
entirely unfamiliar interruption to the silence. Before, behind, to
right and to left, the sound seemed to come from all directions. It
was a small sharp crackling, like the ubiquitous frying of bacon,
like the first flames in the kindling of innumerable bonfires. There
seemed to be no explanation. And then, as we looked more closely,
the riddle gave up its answer. Anchored to a stem of sagebrush, we
saw the horny pupa of cicada. It had begun to split and the full-grown
insect was in process of pushing its way out. Each time it struggled,
its case of amber-colored chitin opened a little more widely. The
continuous crackling that we heard was caused by the simultaneous
emergence of thousands upon thousands of individuals. How long they
had spent underground I could never discover. Dr. Edmund Jaeger, who
knows as much about the fauna and flora of the Western deserts as
anyone now living, tells me that the habits of this particular cicada
have never been closely studied. He himself had never witnessed the
mass resurrection upon which we had had the good fortune to stumble.
All one can be sure of is that these creatures had spent anything
from two to seventeen years in the soil, and that they had all chosen
this particular May morning to climb out of the grave, burst their
coffins, dry their moist wings and embark upon their life of sex and
song.
Three weeks later we heard and saw another
detachment of the buried army coming out into the sun among the pines
and the flowering fremontias of the San Gabriel Mountains. The chill
of two thousand additional feet of elevation had postponed the resurrection;
but when it came, it conformed exactly to the pattern set by the insects
of the desert: the risen pupa, the crackle of splitting horn, the
helpless imago waiting for the sun to bake it into perfection, and
then the flight, the tireless singing, so unremitting that it becomes
a part of the silence. The boys in the Reservations are doing their
best; and perhaps, if they are given the necessary time and money,
they may really succeed in making the planet uninhabitable. Applied
Science is a conjuror, whose bottomless hat yields impartially the
softest of Angora rabbits and the most petrifying of Medusas. But
I am still optimist enough to credit life with invincibility, I am
still ready to bet that the non-human otherness at the root of man's
being will ultimately triumph over the all too human selves who frame
the ideologies and engineer the collective suicides. For our survival,
if we do survive, we shall be less beholden to our common sense (the
name we give to what happens when we try to think of the world in
terms of the unanalyzed symbols supplied by language and the local
customs) than to our caterpillar- and cicada-sense, to intelligence,
in other words, as it operates on the organic level. That intelligence
is at once a will to persistence and an inherited knowledge of the
physiological and psychological means by which, despite all the follies
of the loquacious self, persistence can be achieved. And beyond survival
is transfiguration; beyond and including animal grace is the grace
of that other not-self, of which the desert silence and the desert
emptiness are the most expressive symbols.
(From Tomorrow and Tomorrow
and Tomorrow)
Excerpt from:
Collected Essays
by Aldous Huxley
A Bantam Book / published by arrangement
with Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc.
Copyright © 1943 by Crown Publishers.
Copyright © 1958 by The Curtis Publishing Company.