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Title: Eiseley


1
Eiseleys The Secret of Life
  • HMXP 102
  • Dr. Fike

2
Extra Credit
  • Who will volunteer a paper for our writing
    workshop next Wednesday, November 5th? You would
    need to send a full draft of your paper to the
    class on the listserv, hmxp102002_at_class.winthrop.e
    du, by noon on Tuesday, November 4th. It is
    possible to volunteer a second time but only if
    no one new volunteers. In any case, we need two
    people to share their papers.

3
Robert Frosts Birches
  • Frost is heir to the Romantic tradition in two
    ways
  • First, in Romantic poetry there is a dialectical
    relationship (a give and take) between nature and
    the human mind. They interact. It is as if the
    eye is a lamp.
  • Second, there was a structure that we call the
    Greater Romantic Lyric, which has three sections
  • Here, there, here now, then, now.
  • In the middle section (there, then) the
    imagination is active.
  • In the third section, the speaker returns to his
    original time/place but is different the middle
    section is transformative.

4
The Structure of Birches
  • Lines 1-20 When . . . Here and now.
  • Lines 21-40 But . . . Imagination active.
  • Lines 41-59 So . . . Here and now but with
    added insight.
  • POINT The middle sectionhis imaginative
    reveriehas transformed him.

5
Section 1
  • When he sees bent-over birches, he likes to
    think some boys been swinging them but
    describes how a winter ice storm bends them over
    permanently. At the end of the section, the
    imagination engages Like girls on hands and
    knees that throw their hair / Before them over
    their heads to dry in the sun.
  • This simile is a good hinge into the middle
    section.

6
Section 2
  • He now returns to the idea in line 3 and imagines
    an alternative scenario in which a lone boy bends
    the birches by riding the upper branches down to
    the ground. The imagination is now fully active.
  • Whereas section 1 describes a purely natural
    process, in section 2 the poets mind
    imaginatively interacts with nature by describing
    how a boy physically interacts with birch trees.
  • Frost gives the boy a story that hooks in with a
    mythic pattern of father-son antagonism One by
    one he subdued his fathers trees (line 28). The
    words stiffness and limp imply a that swing
    down from the tops of birches takes the edge off
    sexual desire.

7
Section 3
  • He is back in the present moment. When life is
    tough, he remembers that he was once swinger of
    birches (line 41). (This section echoes
    Williams Wordsworths The World Is Too Much
    with Us and Tintern Abbey.)
  • He describes worldly vicissitudes in terms of
    encountering natural impediments (cobwebs, a twig
    in the eye). He would like to take a break from
    earth (get away from his hectic life for a while)
    and then get a fresh start. He does not have a
    death wish.

8
Section 3 continued
  • In addition, Earths the right place for love
    adds a social dimension (perhaps love of nature
    leads to love of others?).
  • As the poem ends, he imagines climbing toward
    heaven (not to heaven) and then swinging down to
    the ground on a birch tree. This is the kind of
    getaway and return he is talking about.
  • After all, One could do worse than be a swinger
    of birches (line 59). In other words, there are
    worse ways of dealing with lifes stresses
    (alcohol, drugs).

9
The Point
  • Birches introduces the idea that the mind
    engages with the natural world. It is Romantic
    in that respect.
  • In The Secret of Life, Eiseleys imagination
    does the same thing he engages with the natural
    world in order to examine alternative
    possibilities.
  • He deals not only with what Frost calls Truth
    (what is scientifically accurate) but also the
    truth of the imagination.

10
Loren Eiseley
  • http//www.eiseley.org/biography.php
  • Anthropologist
  • Professor
  • The Immense Journey is his most important book.

11
Vocabulary
  • iridescent (5)
  • desiccated (5)
  • slough (7)
  • microtomes (15)
  • simulacrum (18)
  • midge (23)
  • dualism (8 12)
  • materialism (20 28)
  • hobgoblin (20)
  • pipette (21)

12
First Sentence
  • I am middle-aged now, but in the autumn I always
    seek for it again hopefully.
  • What points arise from this sentence?
  • What is the setting of this text? Hint  Setting
    involves both place and time. 
  • Why are both of these elements important in a
    reading of Eiseleys text?

13
First SentenceSignificance
  • Setting Autumn in a field near the authors
    home, after harvest time when nature is a wreck
    of its summer self.
  • Autumn and the authors age suggest the life
    cycle.
  • He is 45 years old (23), the time when a man
    begins to sense his mortality and look beyond the
    physical world.
  • Whereas all things move forward in time, one must
    move backward in time to discover the secret of
    life.
  • The it in line 2 is that secret.
  • He will wander around in this essay in much the
    same way he wanders around in the field.
  • The author uses hopefully correctly here and in
    par. 7.

14
Definition
  • The it in line two of the first sentence is
    the secret of life. 
  • Find other places where he offers statements
    about this so-called secret. 
  • What is the precise definition of the secret that
    the author discusses?

15
Definitions of the Secret of Life
  • Headnote in the older editions the exact
    chemical processes for making life.
  • 7 the mysterious borderline that bounds the
    inanimate
  • 14 the greatest missing link of allthe link
    between living and dead matter
  • The secret, in other words, is whatever caused
    the transition from inert matter to living matter.

16
Question
  • What is the opposite of the secret? The answer
    appears in par. 27.

17
Answer Death
  • At the instant of death, whether of man or
    microbe, that ordered, incredible spinning passes
    away in an almost furious haste of those same
    particles to get themselves back into the
    chaotic, unplanned earth (27).
  • The secret life out of inert matter.
  • Death inert matter out of living matter.

18
Chart
  • TIME ?
  • Inert Matter
  • ..Secret/..
  • Living Matter

  • Death

19
Next Question The Origins of Life
  • What explanations does Eiseley imply when he
    mentions supernatural explanations and
    dualism (8, 12)?

20
Answers
  • supernatural explanations (12) E rejects the
    Genesis story, along with explanations based on
    it (Creationism, Intelligent Design)
  • mind-matter dualism and a complete irrational
    break between life and the world of inorganic
    matter (8)

21
Related Question
  • Does Eiseley believe in evolution?

22
Answer YES!
  • 7 Somewhere, somehow, sometime, in the
    mysterious chemistry of carbon, the long march
    toward the talking animal had begun.
  • the long march a metaphor for evolution.
  • 15 I have come to suspect that this long
    descent down the ladder of life, beautiful and
    instructive though it may be, will not lead us to
    the final secret.
  • ladder of life a metaphor for evolution
  • 16 Still, in your formless shiftings, the you
    remains the sliding particles, the juices, the
    transformations are working in an exquisitely
    patterned rhythm which has no other purpose than
    your preservationyou, the entity, the ameboid
    being whose substance contains the unfathomable
    future. Even so does every man come upward from
    the waters of his birth.
  • In other words, the growth of each of us from
    conception to maturation provides an analogy for
    the evolution of living things from amoebas to
    more complex organisms.
  • 17 You cannot describe how the body you
    inhabit functions, or picture or control the
    flights and spinnings, the dance of the molecules
    that compose it or why up the long stairway
    of the eons they dance from one shape to
    another.
  • Movement/dance up the long stairway of the eons
    a metaphor for evolution.

23
Evolution
  • The immense journey in the books title
    evolution.

24
But Here Is the Problem
  • Note Evolution is about change over time, not
    about ultimate origin.
  • Saying that life evolved is not the same as
    explaining why it began in the first place.
  • So Eiseley offers two theories.

25
Key Question
  • What are the only two other possible
    explanations of life upon earth?  See par. 12.

26
Answers in pars. 12 13
  • 12 life did not arise on this planet, but was
    wafted here through the depths of space. (This
    explanation shunts the secret of life onto
    another planet.)
  • In this view, once the seed from another world
    was planted in soil congenial to its
    development, it then proceeded to elaborate,
    evolve, and adjust until the higher organisms had
    emerged.
  • seed a metaphor for how life began on Earth
  • Panspermia the theory that life exists and is
    distributed throughout the universe in the form
    of germs or spores that develop in the right
    environment (dictionary.com)
  • 13 life has actually arisen on this planet.
  • POINT One or the other must be the case.

27
Here Is the Next Question
  • Both views are scientific in nature. Heres the
    question How does Eiseley present science in
    his chapter?
  • With a partner, find words and phrases that
    suggest things about science.

28
Science
  • Page 2 examination, diligence, modern
    biology, dissection and analysis, life as a
    material manifestation, experimentation,
    theories
  • Page 3 knowledge of nature, evidence,
    laboratories, microscope
  • Page 4 the ultimate chemical, scientific
    effort, analysis, the great powers of the
    mind
  • Page 5 materialism
  • Last page scientists as gods

29
What Is His Point?
  • What is the significance of the following
    terms?
  • dissection and analysis
  • materialism

30
Answer
  • From a scientific/biological/materialist point of
    view, finding the secret of life requires
    sufficient inquiry into the material world.
  • Do you agree with this?
  • Can we know all things about the physical world
    if we dissect it sufficiently?
  • Are you a scientific materialist?

31
Next Question Options?
  • What other point of view is there in Eiseleys
    chapter? In other words, if you do not adopt a
    scientific point of view (the primeval soup
    theory), Creationism (you believe in a
    creator-God), or dualism (you duck the question
    altogether by claiming that God and nature are
    separate), what view do you adopt as regards the
    secret of life? What is Eiseleys answer?

32
Answer Imagination
  • 4 mystery
  • 5 nature not as natural as it looks,
    fantastic magic, myth and miracle
  • Pages 2 4 imagination
  • 14 wandering fruitlessly in pastures
  • 26 wonder, marvel

33
Thus
  • Left brain
  • Science
  • Dissection
  • Analysis
  • Physical world
  • Nature
  • Right brain
  • Myth
  • Imagination
  • Memory
  • Mind and spirit
  • Supernature
  • What is the point of this chart?

34
Eiseleys Point
  • His point is that the stuff in the left column is
    insufficient, at least at the present time, to
    identify the secret of life. Eiseley does not
    believe that science will uncover the secret of
    life in his lifetime, despite headlines that
    suggest that we are close to such a discovery.
  • Given that insufficiency, he turns to the stuff
    in the right column as he muses on the secret of
    life.
  • So the question for us is this What can we say
    about it from the standpoint of right-brain
    resources? For example, see the next slide.

35
Myth What about Animals in par. 6, left?
  • What is the point of the creatures that Eiseley
    mentions?  Here are parts of the relevant
    passages
  • The notion that mice can be generated
    spontaneously from bundles of old clothes is so
    delightfully whimsical that it is easy to see why
    men were loath to abandon it.
  • One could take life as a kind of fantastic
    magic.
  • Is E implying that the Genesis account is also
    delightful whimsy and fantastic magic?

36
Eiseleys Concession Myth
  • After having chided the theologian for his
    reliance on myth and miracle, science found
    itself in the unenviable position of having to
    create a mythology of its own  namely, the
    assumption that what, after long effort, could
    not be proved to take place today had, in truth,
    taken place in the primeval past (9).
  • Here is that scientific myth in par. 8 The
    notion that he the supposedly simple amoeba
    was a simple blob, the discovery of whose
    chemical composition would enable us instantly to
    set the life process in operation, turned out to
    be, at best, a monstrous caricature of the
    truth.
  • POINT Science and mythology are not totally
    discrete categories.

37
Key Sentences in pars. 17-18
  • WHAT CAN A MYTHICAL/METAPHORICAL APPROACH DO FOR
    US?
  • WHAT DO THE FOLLOWING SENTENCES SUGGEST?
  • The secret, if one may paraphrase a savage
    vocabulary, lies in the egg of night.
  • Cf. the next par. night, darkness, and
    egg
  • Only along the edges of this field after the
    frost there are little whispers of it the secret
    of life. Once even on a memorable autumn
    afternoon I discovered a sunning blacksnake
    brooding among the leaves like the very
    simulacrum of old night.

38
Interpretation
  • First sentence The secretlies in the egg of
    night (paradoxnight and egg are unrelated a
    mixed metaphor? certainly an almost impossible
    combination) The secret, in other words, lies
    not in the thing that conceals (night) but in
    its origin, which is itself something that
    conceals (egg). We do not know the secret of
    life because it is at least two removes (night,
    egg) from our perception.
  • Second sentence We do, however, receive hints
    (whispers) of the secret of life, which are
    manifested in living things like the blacksnake.
  • But here is the problem we have only a living
    creature whose whispers (a mixed metaphor
    snakes do not whisper) are like a
    simulacrum/imitation (a simile) of old night (a
    metaphor for something that conceals).
  • The next slide puts the two patterns together.

39
Thus
  • The secret of life inert matter becomes living
    matter.
  • ? all of evolutionary history yields living
    creatures
  • ? one of them, the blacksnake,
  • ? provides a metaphor whispers
  • ? which evokes a simile like a simulacrum or
    imitation
  • ? of another metaphor old night (something that
    conceals)
  • ? within something else that conceals (the egg)
  • And this torturous series of removes and figures
    of speech in Eiseleys mind is his best attempt
    to describe the secret. And the fact that it is
    a sunning blacksnake (my emphasis) does nothing
    but highlight the darkness in which the secret is
    cloaked.
  • POINT Language enacts the secretness of the
    secret.

40
Par. 18
  • The snake diverted me, however. It was the
    dissection of a field that was to occupy usa
    dissection in search of secretsa dissection such
    as a probing and inquisitive age demands.
  • He ends up brooding among the leaves, much like
    the blacksnake that has distracted him.
  • Neither dissection (science) nor brooding
    (imagination, use of language) gets him any
    closer to the secret than he was before, though
    he has generated a provocative series of images
    that emphasizes its remoteness.

41
Next Question
  • So what does Eiseley, great anthropologist,
    conclude about the secret of life? Where does
    Es thinking come to rest in this text?

42
Nature and Supernature?
  • What do the following two statements (both
    including quotations) suggest about the secret
    of life?  How do they enact what the headnote
    calls a sense of the sacreda sense of
    transcendence, of divine agencyin the epic of
    evolution?
  • I am sure now that life is not what it is
    purported to be and that nature, in the canny
    words of a Scotch theologue, is not as natural
    as it looks (5).
  • Rather, I would say that if dead matter has
    reared up this curious landscape of fiddling
    crickets, song sparrows, and wondering men, it
    must be plain even to the most devoted
    materialist that the matter of which he speaks
    contains amazing, if not dreadful powers, and may
    not impossibly be, as Hardy has suggested, but
    one mask of many worn by the Great Face behind
    (28).

43
James McCosh
  • This is the Scotch theologue whom Eiseley
    mentions by name earlier in The Immense Journey.
  • He was a minister, a philosopher, a professor,
    and eventually president of Princeton University.
  • Two of his books illuminate Eiseleys reference
  • The Supernatural in Relation to the Natural
    (1862)
  • The Religious Aspect of Evolution (1887)
  • His point Evolution and divine agency are
    compatible.
  • Nature manifests the supernatural.
  • God is the Final Cause He created matter and
    is responsible for the transition from inert to
    living matter.
  • McCosh also attributes evolution to Gods
    powerGod may be a continuous creatorand it
    makes sense to speak of the intelligent
    creation.

44
Litotes
  • Litotes stating the negative of the opposite of
    what you want to say. Harmon and Holman, A
    Handbook to Literature A form of
    understatement in which a thing is affirmed by
    stating the negative of its opposite. To say She
    was not unmindful when one means that She gave
    careful attention is to employ litotes (297).
  • If you want to suggest that nature has a
    supernatural element, you say that it is not as
    natural as it looks.
  • If you want to say that nature may possibly be
    one of the masks of some Great Face behind it,
    you say that nature may not impossibly be such
    a mask.
  • The effect in each case is to create a sense that
    this conclusion is tenuous, and it is made more
    tenuous still by the substitution of Great Face
    for God or Prime Mover or Creator or Deity.
  • So here he is at the end of his journey,
    scientist to the core but the inability to find
    the secret on his autumn walk has made him
    suspect that there is more afoot than sciences
    pipettes (21) and blue-steel microtomes (15)
    can dissect. He finally arrives at the
    possibility, despite his earlier denial of
    supernatural explanations (12), of Gods role
    in the creation of life. He just cannot bring
    himself to say so that directly.
  • In other words, his attempt to inquire
    scientifically has led him out of
    biology/chemistry to the possibility of a
    recognition of scientific myth and finally to a
    realization that life may have had a divine
    catalyst. But his scientific paradigm makes it
    difficult for him to acknowledge this possibility
    with anything more than a literary flourish.
  • Thus Eiseleys language enacts his dilemma.

45
What Strengthens This Implication
  • Why do you think Eiseley uses the word dust in
    par. 26?
  • What one word alludes to a theological context in
    which divine agency matters?

46
Genesis
  • God formed man of dust from the ground (27)
  • and dust you shall eat (314)
  • In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread,
    till thou return unto the ground for out of it
    wast thou taken for dust thou art, and unto dust
    shalt thou return (319).
  • I will make your descendants as the dust of the
    earth (1316)
  • I who am but dust and ashes (1827)

47
Ultimately, What Does the Text Do?
  • How does this text enact a point about human
    consciousness? 
  • Hints  Consider the two columns (left brain vs.
    right brain). In particular, Eiseleys use of
    imagination, metaphor, memory, and litotes versus
    the repetition of the word "dissection"
    throughout the piece.

48
Thus
  • Left brain
  • Science
  • Dissection
  • Analysis
  • Physical world
  • Nature
  • Right brain
  • Myth
  • Imagination
  • Memory
  • Mind and spirit
  • Supernature
  • What is the point of this chart?

49
POINT
  • The text celebrates the apex of creation the
    human mindinner space.
  • The next slide explains Eiseleys view on the
    mind of the artist.

50
The Artist
  • Loren Eiseley in his autobiography, All the
    Strange Hours likened the brain of a writer to
    an unseen artist's loft in which pictures from
    the past were stored and brought forth to be
    magnified or reduced in order to form a pattern.
    Many of the patterns he created in his work were
    associated with his experiences during his years
    growing up in his prairie state, Nebraska. The
    land, the people and the institutions left an
    ineradicable mark upon him and colored what he
    did.
  • Source http//www.eiseley.org/biography.php

51
More Strengthening of the Implication
  • Eiseleys face parallels the creators Great
    Face.
  • Eiseley (a representative human) is to a field in
    the natural world as some other creator is to
    life itself.
  • Each gives life in one sense or another As he
    has woven the inert and living things in the
    field into an elegant inquiry into the origin of
    life, so some kind of creator may have
    transformed inert matter into living matter.
  • Eiseley is not certain about divine agency, but
    the implication is there for the reader to
    consider.
  • Ultimately, then, the texts futile search for
    the secret of life becomes a celebration of human
    beings place at the apex of evolutionwhat Peter
    Russell calls the global brain. (Note
    Russells film, like Eiseleys chapter, affirms
    evolution but does not have a clue about the
    secret of life, that original transition from
    inert matter to living matter.)
  • But in both Russell and Eiseley, WE ARE THE
    EARTHS WAY OF THINKING ABOUT ITSELF.
  • END
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