The End of All Exploring: T S Eliot and Leonard Cohen
by Richard Harvey on 08/17/18
Richard Harvey reflects on T S Eliot and
Leonard Cohen.
Several years ago, a
friend phoned me excitedly in the early hours of the morning. She wanted me to
know that she had discovered T S Eliot’s lines from the poem “Little Gidding”:
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
I was excited for her.
But I had discovered these lines years before, as had many others. It is one of
those difficult moments when you want to share another’s joy without appearing
condescending. Something has been uncovered in them through art, the lyrical
insight of the wise and you, wanting you to share in it as an equal, cannot.
You cannot because you have crossed that terrain already. Your footsteps have
faded and your footfalls long ago ceased to sound there.
Similar to the
discovery of T S Eliot, is the latest taste for the erstwhile monk, songster,
poet, visionary Leonard Cohen. Of particular merit to the modern ear are the
lyrics to his often–and possibly too often–quoted balled, the aptly-named
“Anthem.” Specifically the line:
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in.
This has become a
perennial popular quote on many social media exchanges and a host of
professional websites. T S Eliot owes a lot to St John of the Cross and the
Bhagavad Gita. So it should come as no surprise to discover that Cohen’s line
appears also in the wake of several sources. First, it owes much to that famous
manic depressive, the comedian Spike Milligan whose epitaph carved on his
headstone read, “I told you I was ill.” He famously joked:
Blessed are the cracked, for they let in the
light.
Even earlier, however,
is E M Forster’s phrase:
The greater the darkness, the brighter shine
the little lights…
(from “What I believe,” 1938)
In spite of all this,
Cohen is generally thought to have pilfered the line, or at least the idea,
from a story in a book by the Buddhist meditation teacher Jack Kornfield. The
story tells of a young man who lost his leg. He enters a Buddhist monastery.
Angry at life, he draws pictures of cracked vases and broken things. Through
his life at the monastery he attains a state of inner peace, yet still he draws
only broken vases. When asked why he still draws broken vases, when he himself
has become spiritually whole, he replies, “… and so are the vases. The crack is
how the light gets in.”
Eliot’s phrase “the
end of all our exploring” is greatly enlightening, because is there ever really
an end? Not only does he seem to take it for granted but he goes so far as to
define it. It is arriving in the place where we started and to “know the place
for the first time.” This is redolent of the Delphic oracle and the plea of the
ancient sages of the Indus valley that we should “know ourselves.”
I saw Leonard Cohen a
few months ago, 78 years old, he played for 3¾ hours on a Madrid stage and
delivered an inspiring concert of almost perfect musicianship and poetry. He
exuded supernal dignity and humility while doing it. Not apparently cracked, he
lit a light before us that brought people and continues to bring people
together all over the world in large numbers to experience reality and
compassion, and to celebrate the human condition as he describes it in his
pulsing, visceral, spiritual poetry.
I cannot say it better
to you than that. He probably could. My favorite line of recent years is:
I ache in the places where I used to play.
But with the release
of his superb new collection of songs, Old Ways, even that line has been
usurped now by:
I’m sick of choosing desire
I’ve been saved by a blessed fatigue.
If an excited friend
phones you up in the early hours of the morning, even if you’ve been listening
to him since Suzanne, try and share in the excitement.
BLOG entry #161
This article by Richard Harvey was originally published at http://www.therapyandspirituality.com/articles/ and it is part of an ongoing retrospective series of blogs. ‘The End of All Exploring: T S Eliot and Leonard Cohen.’ was first published in 2013.