A Conversation Among Five Travelers Concerning Life's True Happiness

Hryhorii (Gregory) Skovoroda
(1722-1794)


Published in Russian Philosophy, Vol. I, The Beginnings of Russian Philosophy: The Slavophiles: The Westernizers, edited by James M. Edie, James P. Scanlan, and Mary-Barbara Zeldin, with the collaboration of George L. Kline (The University of Tennessee Press, 1965). Translated by George L. Kline from "Razgovor pyati putnikov o istinnom shchasti v zhizni," in Gregory Skovoroda, Tvori v dvokh tomakh, Kiev, 1961, I, 207-214, 215-224, 226, 227, 229, 130-232, 232-258, 238-14:, 242-243, 244-245, 145-247. Variant readings (given in the critical commentary at the back of the volume cited) have been used in a few cases where they seemed to be required by the sense. All footnotes are the translator's; where identification was possible, Scriptural and other citations not identified by Skovoroda have been identified in the footnotes.

Transcribed into hypertext by Andrew Chrucky, July 30, 2004. I have substituted throughout the text colloquial English expressions for archaic English pronouns and verbs. Thus, "you" instead of "thou," except where Biblical passages are quoted.

Athanasius.
In their lives men labor, are troubled, and pile up treasures, but to what end many of them do not themselves know. Upon reflection, all the thousands of varied human enterprises are seen to have but a single end -- the heart's happiness. To this end we choose friends according to our inclination in order that we may take pleasure in sharing our thoughts with them; we achieve high rank in order that our judgment may rejoice at the respect of others; we devise various kinds of food and drink to please our taste; we seek out different kinds of music, composing a multitude of concertos, minuets, dances, and contre-danses to delight our ears; we build fine houses, plant gardens and orchards, and weave gold-brocaded fabrics, embroidering them with pleasingly colored silken threads, and deck ourselves out in such garments -- which are soft and delicate to the touch and give pleasure to the eye of the beholder; we concoct fragrant perfumes, powders, and creams to gratify our sense of smell. In a word, we try to gladden our spirits with every means we can devise. Oh, how great is the gladness of the high-born and prosperous in this world! Men of open spirit live in their houses with joy and satisfaction. Oh, how precious are you, joy of the heart!

For your sake, tsars, princes, and men of wealth pay uncounted thousands. And we who are poor and not prosperous nourish ourselves, as it were, from the crumbs that fall from their tables. Just think of the triumphant splendor of the renowned cities of Europe.

James.
It is truly great. I have heard that nowhere are there more diversions and delights than in Paris and Venice.

Athanasius.
True, they are many, but until you bring them to us from Venice we will perish here of boredom.

Gregory.
Stop talking nonsense, dear friends. High rank, a pleasant setting, games, diversions, and all of your many enterprises are powerless to bring joy to the spirit or to drive away the boredom that has taken possession of you.

James.
What then can do it?

Gregory.
Only one thing, and that is to discover in what true happiness consists and then to acquire it.

Athanasius.
That is true. We are born for true happiness, and we travel toward it; our life is a road which flows like a river.

James.
I have long sought happiness, but nowhere have I been able to find it.

Gregory.
If you truly wish to find it, unravel this question for me: What is the best of all for man?

James.
Heaven knows. You do ask us for something which the great sages have not been able to provide; they have diverged in their views like travelers on different roads. For what is best of all is highest of all, and what is highest of all is the head and crown of all. This chief good was called by the ancient philosophers the "ultimate good" and the "summum bonum." But who can unravel for you the homeland and haven of all our desires?

Gregory.
Softly, my dear sir! You have risen very high. Let me put it to you more simply: What do you desire most of all in life?

James.
It is as though you had stirred up an ant hill with your staff -- so greatly has your question agitated our desires.

Athanasius.
I should like to be a man of high rank and have underlings who are as sturdy as Russians and as virtuous as ancient Romans; I should like a house like those in Venice and a garden like those in Florence; I should like to be intelligent, learned, noble, and as rich as a bull in furs.

Gregory.
What nonsense are you speaking?

Athanasius.
Stalwart as a lion, comely as Venus --

James.
I suddenly recall a she-dog named Venus.

Gregory.
My dear sir, please to continue.

James.
With a tail like a lion, a head like a bear, ears like a donkey. . . .

Gregory.
To think that such foolish wishes should reach the ears of God. You, with your enterprises, are like the tree which desires at one and the same time to be an oak, a maple, a linden, a birch, a fig tree, an olive tree, a plane tree, a date tree, a rosebush, and a rue -- both sun and moon, both head and tail. The babe in arms often reaches for a sharp knife or a flame, but Nature, our most merciful mother, knows better than we do what is good for us. Although we weep and howl, she feeds us, as is seemly, at her own breasts, and clothes us. The good child is satisfied with this, but the bad seed stirs up both himself and others. Millions of unhappy children complain day and night, content with nothing. If you place one thing in their hands, they cry for something else. We cannot fail to be unhappy.

Athanasius.
Why is that?

Gregory.
Because we cannot find happiness.

James.
For what reason?

Gregory.
Because we do not desire it and cannot desire it.

Athanasius.
But why?

Gregory.
Because we do not understand in what it consists. The chief thing is to discover the source of desire. Desire seeks something and then receives it. This is well-being, that is, the getting of what is good for you.1 Now should you understand what wisdom means.

James.
I often hear the word "wisdom."

Gregory.
It is the task of wisdom to explain what happiness consists in -- this is its right wing,2 and virtue labors to find it. For this reason, the Greeks and Romans called it "manliness" and "strength" (αρετε, virtus) -- that is its left wing. Without these two wings you can never rise up and fly away into well-being. Wisdom is like the sharp and far-seeing eye of the eagle; and virtue is like manly arms joined to the nimble legs of a deer. This divine union is vividly depicted in the following fable.

James.
You have taken it out of my mouth. For surely you mean the story of the two travelers -- one legless, the other blind.

Gregory.
Indeed, you have grasped my very thought.

Athanasius.
Will you set it forth more fully?

Gregory.
A traveler, in passing through many countries and kingdoms, lost his legs. He then thought of returning to his father's house. Supporting himself with his arms and hands, he made his way back, but with enormous labor. Finally, when he had crawled to the top of a mountain from which he could see his father's house, he lost his arms and hands as well. From that spot his sharp eyes gazed with hungry joy across the rivers, fields, and cliffs, across the summits of the pyramid-like mountains, to the castle, gleaming from afar, which was the house of his father and of his whole peace-loving family -- the end and crown of all his laborious journeyings. But the misfortune was that our Seer, having neither arms nor legs, merely tormented himself, like the rich man in the Gospel story as he looked upon Lazarus.

However, glancing back, he unexpectedly glimpsed a strange and pitiful sight. A blind man was stumbling along the road, listening intently, groping now toward the right, now toward the left, as though he were drunk. As he came closer he sighed: "Our days are spent in vanity. . . . Oh Lord, tell me of Your paths. . . . Alas, of my wanderings there is no end!" And he spoke other words of this kind to himself, sighing as he repeatedly stumbled and fell.

"My friend, I fear that I may frighten you, but who are you?" asked the man of clear vision.

"This is the thirty-fourth year of my journey, and you are the first to cross my path," answered the man whose eyes were darkened. "My journeying in many parts of the world has turned into exile. The extraordinary heat of the Arabian sun deprived me of my sight, and I am returning blind to my father."

"And who is your father?"

"He lives in the mountain castle which is called Mirgorod, or 'City of Peace.' His name is Uranius, and I am called Doer."

"Good heavens, what say you?" cried the man of sight; "I am your brother; I am Seer." Extraordinary happiness always finds expression in tears. After copious shedding of tears, the blind man, his eyes streaming, spoke to his brother as follows:

"Dearest brother! I have heard rumors about you, and now I see you with the eye of my heart. Take pity on me, put an end to my sorrows, be my teacher. In truth, labor gladdens me. But this constant stumbling drains away all my strength."

"Woe is me," said the man of radiant eye, "that I cannot serve you, my beloved brother. As a traveler I have traversed the whole circuit of the earth on my own two legs. They carried me everywhere without mishap, but the craggy mountains which I encountered on my path took them from me, so that I had to continue my journey supporting myself upon my arms and hands. At this place I have lost them as well. Now I can neither walk nor crawl upon the earth. Many men have wished to make use of me, but since I am unable even to crawl, I could be of no use to them."

"That is not the end of the matter," said the blind man, "you are a light and precious burden to me: I will carry you, who are my treasure, upon my back. Your clear eyes will be the eternal masters of my body and a head to all my members. Put an end to the torment of this primordial darkness which hounds me inhumanly along the empty byways of His path. I am your steed; mount upon my shoulders and guide me, dearest brother and master."

"I will mount up willingly, my brother, in order to show the truth of the word of God written in the Gospel: 'Brother helped by brother is like a firm and tall city, strong like a well-founded kingdom,' Now, look you at God's wondrous work: two men are made one. One traveler is created from two kindred souls, without any fusion of the two, but also without division into servant and served. This unprecedented traveler follows the central path, turning neither to the right nor to the left, readiy crossing rivers, forests, cliffs, and crevasses, passing over sheer mountains, and climbing with joy to the height of the City of Peace. There he will be surrounded by radiant and fragrant air; an orderly crowd of inhabitants, breathing peace and love and clapping their hands, will wait for him at the gate; and within the gates Uranius, the Ancient of Days, will receive him into His holy embrace."

James.
What then will I say to you?

Gregory.
Declare your chief desire.

James.
Our sovereign desire is that we should be happy.

Gregory.
Where have you seen even a bird or beast without such an aim? But say you, where and in what is the happiness you seek? Until you can say that, my dear friend, you are like the blind man: he seeks his father's castle but he cannot see where it lies. He seeks happiness but, not understanding where it is, he falls into unhappiness. Most merciful Nature has opened the path to happiness to all souls without exception --

Athanasius.
Stay! I think these words smell of heresy -- "all without exception"!

James.
I pray you, do not interrupt, most orthodoxly superstitious sir; each and every one is born into the world for a good end. And a good end means happiness. How can one say that Nature, our universal Mother, has not opened the path to happiness for every creature that breathes?

Athanasius.
Your "Nature" too smells of idolatry: it were better to say that God has opened the path -- not your heathen Nature.

James.
All hail the sage theologian! If I, in calling God "Nature," am a heathen, you have long since been an idolater.

Athanasius.
How is that?

James.
Because this name ("God" [i.e., θεος]) is a heathen name.

Athanasius.
That may be so, but Christians have long since made it their own.

James.
But why do you fear to call God "Nature," since the early Christians adopted the heathen name "God"?

Athanasius.
You have indeed learned how to chatter.

James.
Is it possible that you have never heard that the Supreme Being has no proper name of His own?

Athanasius.
No name? But did he not have a name among the Jews? Was it not "Jehovah"?

James.
I do not know.

Athanasius.
So there is something that you do not know!

James.
I know only that in Isaiah it is written in many places: "I am that I am."3 Sir theologian, leave the glossing of words to the Hebrew glossators, and yourself lay hold on what is meant by this name. There is no great need to know the origin of this word . . . , but rather to know what it means. This is the essence of life in time- -- if one can only grasp it.

Yermolai.
May God help us! What are you quarreling about? I have been listening for a long time.

Athanasius.
Greetings, dear friend!

James.
Will you be the judge of our quarrel?

Yermolai.
Gladly, but what is it about?

James.
They consider it idolatry to call God "Nature."

Yermolai.
In the Bible God has many names: He is called "fire," "water," "wind," "iron," "stone," and given other names without number. Why then should He not be called "Nature"? In my own opinion it would be impossible to find a more important and more seemly name for God than this one. Natura is a Latin word; in Russian we call it priroda or yestestvo. This word refers to everything that comes to birth within the mechanism of this world, and also to what is unborn, like flame. In general, whatever is born is called "the world." For that reason --

Athanasius.
Stay. Everything material is or was born, including your noble flame.

Yermolai.
I will not dispute it, dear friend. Let us admit that everything material was born. But why should not all of creation be called by that inclusive name, "Nature"? The whole world, with all its comings to birth, is concealed within it like a fine, flowering tree within the seed from which it develops. Moreover, the word "Nature" means not only every being that is born and changes, but also the secret economy of that never-failing force which has its center, or chief and middle point, everywhere and its extremities nowhere, like the sphere by which that force is graphically represented. Who can be like God? It is called Nature because everything that happens on its visible surface and everything that is born out of its secret and unbounded depths, as from the womb of our Universal Mother, has a beginning in time. And since this Mother does not have to receive [a seed] from anyone in order to give birth, but gives birth of and by herself, She, or It, is called both Father and beginning or principle [nachalo = αρχη], since It has neither beginning nor end and is dependent upon neither time nor place. It is represented graphically by a ring or circlet, or else by a coiled serpent holding its tail between its teeth.

The action of this wise and omnipotent Force, which is called by every name, is referred to as the secret law, the governance or realm diffused endlessly and timelessly in all material. One cannot ask when it began, for it always was; nor how long it will remain, for it will always be; nor to what point it extends, for it is everywhere at all times. "Why do you ask after my name," God says to Moses, "if through the mist of things you can glimpse what everywhere was, is, and will be -- that is my mime and my nature?" The name is in the nature, and the nature is in the name; the one does not differ from the other. Both are the same; both are eternal. He who sees me through the darkness with the eye of faith knows my name. But he who seeks to know my name knows neither me nor my name, for both are the same. My name and I are one. I am that I am. I am he. . . .

Gregory.
How long will you go on quarreling? Let us return in our discussion.

Yermolai.
What was the discussion about?

James.
About what happiness consists in.

Gregory.
Nature, the most merciful Mother and Father of our every comfort, has opened the path of happiness to all creatures that breathe without exception.

James.
Art you content with this conclusion?

Athanasius.
Yes, I am.

Gregory.
But the trouble is that we do not seek to find out precisely where happiness has its place. . . . Lack of counsel is the source of our unhappiness. It makes us prisoners, representing the bitter as sweet and the sweet as bitter. That would not happen if we took counsel with ourselves. Let us judge, my friends, and take account; it is never too late to begin a good work. Let us seek that in which our strength lies. Let us take thought, for thought is the prayer that is sweetest to God. Tell me what you consider best of all. If you find it, then you will also find happiness, and at the same time will be able to grasp it.

Yermolai.
What seems best to me is to be content with all things.

Gregory.
Make your meaning clearer!

Yermolai.
To be content with one's money, one's land, one's health, the people around one, and with everything else in the world.

James.
Why are you laughing?

Athanasius.
From joy at what has befallen my foolishness: the foolishness which was my companion desired to be as humped as a camel, as big-bellied as a whale, as long-nosed as a crocodile, as graceful as a greyhound, as appetizing as a wild boar, etc.

Gregory.
You have the lips of a theologian, but not a theologian's heart. You speak well about God, but you desire an absurd thing. Don't be angry, dear friend, at my frankness. Picture to yourself the countless number of those whose fate it is never to know plenty. Picture the sick and the very old, and call to mind those who are born with crippled bodies. Surely you do not think that Nature, our most merciful and solicitous Mother, has slammed the door to happiness in their faces, thus behaving like a stepmother. I beg of you, do not confine God's all-wise providence within narrow limits; do not slander Nature's omnipotent mercy. Nature is good to every creature that breathes, and not just to a chosen few of the human race. In her sedulous providence she has prepared all those things without which the happiness of the least worm cannot be accomplished. If we lack anything, we do not need it. The mole has no eyes, but what does that matter? Birds know nothing of shipbuilding; but they have no need of such knowledge. What they need to know they do know. The lily knows nothing of manufacture; it is beautiful without it. Leave off, dear, friend, this slanderous petition to Nature our Mother.

Yermolai.
I do not slander and I make no petition.

Gregory.
You slanderest Her mercy.

Yermolai.
God forbid! I do not slander God.

Gregory.
What do you mean, not slander? How many thousands of people are without that which you desire?

Yermolai.
Countless thousands, but what of that?

Gregory.
Strange man! God then, in your definition, is not merciful?

Yermolai.
How so?

Gregory.
Because He has closed off from them the path to that which you desire as the firm flesh of happiness.

Yermolai.
What point have we reached in our discussion?

Gregory.
That point where either you and your desire are stupid or the Lord is not merciful.

Yermolai.
God forbid that we should say such a thing.

Gregory.
Why are you so sure that attaining the object of your desire will make you happy? Consider how many thousands of men have been ruined by attaining what they desired. Think of the vices which spring from good health and abundance. Whole republics have fallen because of it. How then can you desirc abundance as though it were happiness? Happiness does not make men unhappy. Do you not see how many men have been swallowed up by abundance as by a universal flood, while their souls have ground themselves to pieces through immoderate undertakings, like millstones that turn without grain? God's mercy would shower you with abundance if that were needful for you; but, as it is, cast away this desire from your soul. It stinks like dark Russian kvas --

Yermolai.
Do you call my desire kvas?

Gregory.
Yes, and a vile kvas, dark and filled with unsleeping worms which mortify the soul day and night. For, as Solomon says: "Counsel in the heart of man is like deep water,"4 so I say the desire in your heart is like kvas that is vile and dark. "You have put gladness in my heart,"5 so David sang -- and I say: You have taken this disturbance into your heart.

Yermolai.
Why is desire worldly?

Gregory.
Because it is common.

Yermolai.
And why is it common?

Gregory.
Because it stinks and because it is everywhere. Where will you find me a soul not filled with this kvas? Who does not desire honors, silver, and lands? There is the source of murmuring, complaints, sorrows, hostilities, litigations, robberies, and thefts -- of all mechanisms, all hooks and crooks and cunning devices. From this spring flow treason, revolt, usurpation, the fall of states, and a whole sea of troubles. "Not so, Lord," says Saint Peter in the Acts, "for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean."6 In our language the word is "unclean," but in Greek it is choinon, i.e., "common." "Common," "worldly," and "unclean" all mean the same thing. The opinion of the world is not like deep water in a man's heart, but like a swamp -- choinon, coenum -- a dwelling-place for swine and evil spirits. Who has stamped this crooked path to happiness so deeply in man's heart? Surely it was the Father of Darkness.

Receiving this secret glory of the dark kingdom from one another, men, led by a spirit infected with worldly appetites, wander from the glory of the Light Divine which leads to true happiness. They have not entered into the heart of the sweetest truth, and their sinful wandering, in the words of Jeremiah, "is written . . . with the point of a diamond: it is graven . . . upon the horns of your altars."7 Whatever they say or do follows from this, since this primordial script cannot be rubbed out, or cut away, or destroyed, unless a man tries with all his heart, as God says to Paul: "For we wrestle not against flesh and blood. . . ."8

Gird up your loins, oh man, and arm yourself against your own wicked opinion. Why do you esteem the ways of the world? For you know that truth always resides and will reside in the few men enlightened by God; truth cannot accept the world. Bring before you the best painters and architects, and you will discover that truth in the plastic arts is not spread abroad, but that the crowd is marked by ignorance and lack of taste.

Yermolai.
Then will you tell us in what true happiness consists?

Gregory.
First you should discover in what it does not consist, so that, having explored the empty spaces, you can more readily come to the place where it resides.

James.
But looking in dark corners without a candle -- how can one find it?

Gregory.
Here is your candle: our most merciful Father has opened the path to happiness to all men. With this touchstone you can test the purity of gold and silver.

Athanasius.
But what if one is unskilled in such testing?

Gregory.
Here is the way to test: Can all men be artists and architects?

Athanasius.
Of course not. That would be absurd.

Gregory.
Hence happiness does not lie in those callings. You see that this path is not open to everyone.

Athanasius.
Just as the whole body cannot be an eye, so not everyone can be an artist.

Gregory.
Can all men be prosperous and of high station, stalwart and comely? Can everyone live in France? Can all men be born in the same age? -- By no means! Thus it is plain that true happiness lies neither in high rank nor bodily gifts, neither in a beautiful country nor a glorious age, neither in lofty sciences nor the abundance of wealth.

Athanasius.
But surely one can be happy even though he has high rank and lives in a pleasant land.

Gregory.
You have jumped to the other side of the question, like the drunken Pole on his mare.

Athanasius.
How is that?

Gregory.
He was unable to mount without assistance, and when for the twelfth time, he slid over onto the other side. "The devil with it!" he said angrily. "They peppered me up too much."

Athanasius.
I'm not asking about him; I'm asking about myself.

Gregory.
Not long ago you said that high rank and abundance constituted happiness, and now you will exclude them altogether. I do not say that the happy man cannot enjoy high station, or live in a pleasant land, or have things in abundance; I say only that it is not through his rank, his homeland, or the abundance of his property that he is happy. The fragrance of a plentiful feast in a fine house is not due to the ornamentation of the dwelling. Fine pastries are often served in unornamented dwellings. The splendor of a house -- as the saying goes -- comes from its fine pastries, and not from its fine corners.9 Can one assert that all the inhabitants of France, without exception, are gay?

Athanasius.
Who would make such a claim?

Gregory.
But if one's homeland were the essence of happiness, no one in France could fail to be happy. Every rank and station has its happy and its unhappy men. God limited happiness neither to the days of Abraham nor to the ancestors of Solomon nor to the reign of King David, neither to the sciences nor to social ranks, neither to natural gifts nor to abundance of possessions. . . .

Athanasius.
Where then is happiness to be sought, if it is neither here nor there nor anywhere else?

Gregory.
I learned that while I was still a boy, as you shalt see from this fable: An old man and his wife built themselves a hut but left no window in it. The hut was not very cheerful. What should they do? After long deliberation, the "family senate" decided that they should go to fetch some light. They got an animal skin and spread it out in the midday sun to collect sunlight and take it back to the hut.

They did this several times and then looked to see if there was light in the hut. But they saw nothing. The old woman decided that the light must be leaking out, like wine from a wineskin; therefore they should run faster with it. Running toward the hut, the two "senators" crashed together at the door. The foot of one hit the head of the other. A noisy quarrel arose. "You have certainly lost your mind," said the old woman. "And you were born without one," retorted the old man.

They were about to go to the distant mountains and valleys to fetch light; but a strange monk stood in their way. Though only fifty years old, he was very clever at providing light. "Because of your offer of bread and salt,"10 he said, "I must not hide this secret which will help you." Following his advice, the old man took a hatchet and began to hack through the wall of the hut, uttering such words as these: "Universal light, living light, light called by all names, ubiquitous light, light that favors no person -- visit this dwelling, bring it light and enlightenment." Suddenly the wall broke open; pleasant light flooded the dwelling. And from that time to this men have built lighted chambers in that land.

Athanasius.
There is no one in the world so foolish as your old man and woman.

Gregory.
He is mine and your, and belongs to all men.

Athanasius.
Impossible! What is his name?

Gregory.
Ish.11

Athanasius.
Ish -- the devil take him.

Gregory.
You flee him, but he is always with you.

Athanasius.
In what sense?

Gregory.
If you will escape him, you will be him.

Athanasius.
I have had enough of your old man.

Gregory.
What difference does the name make, if your deeds show you to be just such a one as Ish is?

Athanasius.
Away with him, I say!

Yermolai.
And what is the old woman's name?

Gregory.
Mut.12

James.
Mut and Ish are not to be divided;13 they are an inseparable pair.

Gregory.
But is not every one of us an Ish? We seek happiness14 in our social stations, our epoch, our country -- but it is always and everywhere with us. We are in it, like a fish in water; surrounding us, it seeks us out. It is nowhere, because it is everywhere. It is like the radiance of the sun. Do you but open a passage for it into your soul. It is always knocking against your wall, seeking an entrance and not finding it. And your heart is dark and joyless, like the brink of an abyss. Say you, is it not foolishness and madness to worry about a jeweled crown? To what end? As though a man in a simple cap could not enjoy the blessed and universal light to which this prayer flows upward: "Hear me, oh You holy One, Who has an eternal and all-seeing eye." The foolish husband goes forth from the house with his malicious wife, seeks happiness outside himself, moves from one calling to another, acquires a brilliant name, drapes himself in bright garments, draws to himself a swinish rabble of gold coins and silver vessels, finds friends and foolish comrades, in order to bring a ray of blessed radiance and radiant blessedness into his soul. Is there light? They look -- there is nothing. Do you look at the heaving ocean, at the crowd of men who in every age, country, and station have been filled with disorder and rebellion. Look you at what they call "peace" or "light." What is its effect? Does it not struggle, carry on lawsuits, scheme, worry, undertake, build, destroy, whirl, cast a shadow? Do you not see how Ish and Mut run into their hut? Is there light? They look -- there is nothing.

James.
Blessed Ish and happy Mut! At the end of their days they prayed that the all-seeing, unsleeping great Eye of the whole world, the radiant sun, should bring light into their dwelling, banishing eternal torment, rebellion, and vacillation.

Longinus.
God give you joy!

Gregory.
Oh, my dear frieid! What spirit taught you to approach so silently? We thank you for your felicitation.

James.
The ancient Christians always moved in silence.

Yermolai.
That is not astonishing. This mode of silent movement is characteristic of Christ our Lord. It springs from the peace of God. Christ has brought into the world a peace which passeth understanding. . . . "Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you. . . . Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid."15

Athanasius.
Do you know what we are discussing?

Longinus.
I have heard everything down to the last detail.

Athanasius.
He must have been sitting beneath that apple tree. Am I right?

Longinus.
You could not see me because of the branches.

Gregory.
Tell us, my dear Longinus, is there any more miserable creature than a man who has not discovered what is best and most desirable for him?

Longinus.
I myself have often been astonished at our excessive curiosity, assiduity, and penetration with respect to peripheral things: we have measured the sea, the earth, the air, and the heavens, and have disturbed the belly of the earth to draw out metals. We have traced the paths of the planets; we have looked on the moon for mountains, rivers, and cities; we have discovered an uncounted multitude of worlds. We build incomprehensible machines, fill up great abysses, block off and redirect the flow of waters; we produce hundreds of new experiments and wild inventions.

Good heavens, what is there that we cannot do! But the sad thing is that, in all this, greatness is lacking. Something is missing which we cannot even name; we know that it is missing, but we do not know what it is. We are like the babe which cannot yet talk: it only cries, not being able to know or to say what it wants, and feeling only annoyance. Does not our soul's evident dissatisfaction suggest that all of our sciences cannot make our minds full? You see that the sciences do not fill up the abyss of our souls. We have swallowed up a countless multitude of spinning clockworks, like those on an English bell tower -- each one with its own planets, each planet with its own mountains, oceans, and cities -- but we remain ravenous. Our thirst is not slaked; rather it increases.

The more copiously we dine on mathematics, medicine, physics, mechanics, music, and their ungovernable sisters, the more our heart burns with hunger and thirst. In our coarse stupefaction we fail to see that all of them are only handmaidens serving a mistress, tails to a head, without which the entire body remains ineffective. What is more restless, dissatisfied, and dangerous than a human heart that is attended by such ungoverned slaves? Is there anything that it will not venture to undertake? The insatiable spirit decks itself out, furthers and follows its fancy, like a ship or a carriage that lacks a guiding hand -- without counsel or foresight, and hence without enjoyment. Like ravening dogs, which growl as they gulp down deadly dust and ashes, alienated and erring from the moment we leave the womb, we avoid the essential truth which rings out above the spiritual abyss in us: "I am that I am. . . . I am He."16 Men have not yet taken account of their most essential need, or of the limit, essence, and extent of all their desires and intentions, so as to bring all of their works to a most certain and central point. They have neglected the Mistress of all the ancillary spirits and sciences which whirl from earth to earth; they avoid the door of Her mercy, a door which opens outward, leading our thoughts away from the baseness and villainy of the shadows toward the radiant and essential truth of an unfading happiness.

And now give thought, dear friends, and tell me what is man's most essential need. What is best for you and most desirable in itself? What can make you happy? Think of this now, in good time; leave the ranks of those lost travelers who do not know where they are going or why! Our life is a path,17 and the way to happiness is not short.

Athanasius.
I should have expressed my desire long since, but I cannot think what it is that is best in the world for me.

Longinus.
Ah, man! Be ashamed to say such a thing! If the setting sun reddens the Western sky, we prophesy that the following day will dawn fair; but if the Eastern sky is red we say -- and it happens thus -- that there will be frost and bad weather throughout the day.18 Say, if a dweller in one of the cities of the moon were to visit our earthly globe, would he not be astonished at our wisdom, seeing that we are so skilled in interpreting heavenly signs? But at the same time would not our moon-man be beside himself to discover that we are blind, stupid, and lazy in dealing with the economy of our own tiny world? We know no more about it than we do about [the workings of] an English watch; we neither notice nor understand the most astonishing of all systems -- the system of our own small body. Say, would our guest not be justified in comparing us to the foolish mathematician who fully understands a circle millions of miles in diameter but can feel neither the power nor the beauty of a small golden ring? -- or to the scribe who can read and understand words and letters that are fifteen arshins19 high, but cannot puzzle out either alpha or omega if they are written on a scrap of paper or on a fingernail? . . .

Athanasius.
For me there would seem to be nothing better than to have a heart which is tranquil and at peace. Given that, everything else is bearable and even pleasant.

James.
I should like to have a fortress in my soul so firm that nothing could shake or upset it.

Yermolai.
As for me, give me living joy and joyful life; I would not exchange such a treasure for anything else.

Longinus.
Your three desires are essentially one and the same. Can an apple tree be alive and joyful if its root is not healthy? But the healthy root is a firm soul and a heart at peace. A healthy root brings moisture to all the limbs and gives them life. A heart at peace, filled with living waters, leaves its imprint upon the surface. "And he will be like a tree planted by the rivers of water. . . ."20

. . . Without a willing heart everything is burdensome, even the easiest task. If all of a man's sons were to leave him and, |deserting their home, should bury themselves in mathematics, navigation, and physics, one might justly say that they had no thought of tilling the land. However, agriculture is ten times better than such involuted sciences, since it is more needful to all men. Peace is buried like a priceless treasure in the house within ourselves. One may say that peace never enters the mind of homeless men or of wanderers who eat out their hearts in empty trivialities. . . .

Athanasius.
Gregory was evidently mistaken; previously he said that virtue labors to find happiness, and he called it, with the Greeks and Romans, "strength" and "manliness." But strength that is peace is also happiness. Why should one seek it and for what purpose? For are not strength and force the same?

Longinus.
That's a sly trick! If only you were as clever at finding peace as you are quick to ridicule others and point out their mistakes! In this you show that the sons of this wicked age are cleverer than the sons of the Divine Light. Do you not know that the very quest for true happiness is a movement along the divine path, the path of peace -- and that this path has many steppingstones? Is this not the beginning of true happiness -- finding oneself upon the path of peace? . . .

Athanasius.
It seems that a man would always be tranquil if everything happened according to his will.

Longinus.
God forbid!

Athanasius.
Why do you say that?

Gregory.
What if your reason and will were like the old man's cat?

Athanasius.
What do you mean?

Gregory.
When the old man started a fire in the stove, his stubborn kitten refused to leave it. The old man dragged it down and whipped it soundly.

Athanasius.
I should try to make my will conform to that of the most sophisticated of men.

Gregory.
Would you select such men from the parliament of London or that of Paris? But know you that even if you should take as your judge that king who condemned Nature, our most wise Mother, for Her arrangement of the heavenly spheres, God and time are wiser even than he. Why should you seek a better judge? Depend upon Him and make His holy Will your own. If you accept it, it is already your. The harmony of the will lies in a single soul and an undivided heart. What is better than friendship with the Most High? If you have it, everything will be done according to your own will and to the all-wise Will. And this is to be content with all things. Our Yermolai desires this, but he does not understand what it means to be content with all things. You see that the words of Paul -- "In everything give thanks"21 -- are the source of perfect peace and joy and happiness. What can trouble my heart? Everything is in fact done by God's will; but I accept it, and so it is my own will. Why should one be troubled? If a thing is impossible, then, of course, it is useless; they are one and the same. The more useful a thing is, the more possible it is. My friends, there is wisdom if we will but carry out what we say: "Your will be done. . . ."

Yermolai.
I recall the wise saying of a certain sage:22 I give thanks to blessed Nature for making what is necessary easy to obtain, and what is hard to obtain unnecessary and of little use.

Gregory.
Let us give thanks to our Heavenly Father for having opened our eyes. Now we understand in what our true happiness consists. It lives in the inward peace of our own heart, and peace lives in harmony with God. The greater the harmony the greater one's blessedness. The health of the body is nothing else than the balance and harmony of fire, water, air, and earth; and the quieting of the soul's rebellious thoughts is the health of the soul, and life eternal. A man who is in harmony with God has just as much peace in his heart whether he has three pieces of gold, or fifty, or a hundred. As the shadows flee away, the light enters in. Blessed is he who from day to day mounts ever higher upon the mountain of this most radiant City of Peace. . . .

I beg of you to hearken to this fable:

Five travelers, guided by their guardian angel, came to the Kingdom of Peace and Love. Melchizedek,23 the king of this land, was in no way like other kings. There was nothing perishing in his kingdom, everything was eternal and pleasant down to the last hair, and his laws were wholly opposed to tyranny. A beautiful and shining arch formed the boundary of this blessed land, and on it was written: "Primordial Peace." In this peace was everything which Holy Writ ascribes to the Promised Land. Around it all things seemed plunged in darkness.

As soon as the newcomers reached the shining arch, a great multitude of the immortal went forth to greet them. What was old -- both their clothing and their bodies -- fell from them like a garment. They were clad in new bodies and new clothing, embroidered in gold with these words: "Take hold of yourself more strongly."

Suddenly, harmonious music was heard. A choir sang: "Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors."24 The gates were lifted, and the guests were conducted to those cloistered places of which David sang: "How amiable are thy tabernacles." . . .25 The travelers were seated at the banquet table of the immortals. They were offered angelic bread, new wine, a perfect lamb of a year old, a she-goat of three years old, and that heifer which Abraham offered to his divine Guest; young pigeons and turtledoves and manna -- everything needful for a feast, of which it is written: "It is good and comely for one to eat and to drink."26

However, amidst all these festivities the guests were not festive in spirit. Some secret sorrow gnawed at their hearts. "Have no fear, dear guests," said the blessed citizens, "this happens to each new arrival. Each of them must fulfill the divine saying: 'Six times shalt you leave your sorrows, and the seventh time this evil will not touch you.' "27 Then they were led to the King himself. "I know your complaint before you make your petition," said the King of Peace. "In my realm there is neither sickness nor sorrow nor crying.28 You yourselves have brought this sorrow with you from the neighboring heathen lands which are hostile to my land."

He commanded his angels to take them away to the house of healing. There they took emetics for six days; on the seventh day they were fully cured of all their ills. Instead of sorrow, there was written on the heart of one: "Your will be done"; on another: "Righteous are you, O Lord, and upright are your judgments";29 on a third: "Abraham believed the Lord . . .";30 on a fourth: "I will praise the Lord forever . . .";31 on a fifth: "In everything give thanks. . . ."32

Meanwhile, the universal assembly sang Isaiah's song, clapping their hands in harmony and joy unspeakable: "And the Lord hall guide you continually, and satisfy your soul in drought, and make fat thy bones; and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like it spring a spring of water, whose waters fail not. And they that shall be of thee will build the old waste places; thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations. . . ."33

To the last inhabitant, all of them sang this song with such sweet and full voices that even in this world my inner ear can still hear it.

Athanasius.
I know what you mean. But what emetic did they take?

Gregory.
Strong spirits.

Athanasius.
What are these spirits called?

Gregory.
The Eucharist.

Athanasius.
And where may we obtain it?

Gregory.
Poor fellow! Do you not yet know that the King's house of healing is the most Holy Bible? There you will find an apothecary and a heavenly hospital staffed by angels. Within yourself is the archiatrist, or chief doctor. To the chambers of this hospital the good Samaritan brought the unhappy traveler to Jerico. Only in this house of healing can you find remedies to cleanse your heart of malicious and cruel enemies, of whom it is written: "A man's enemies stand by his own hearth." Your enemies are the opinions34 which have come to hold sway in your own heart, constantly tormenting it; they murmur against God, slander and oppose Him, continually disparaging the order which governs the world and attempting to restore the most ancient laws. Clothed in darkness, they eternally torment themselves and those who agree with them, because they see that the governance of nature does not folbw their demon-like desires or their clouded conceptions in all things, but continues according to the counsels of our supreme Father -- yesterday, today, and forever. Those without undersanding dispraise the disposition of the heavenly spheres, criticze the quality of the earth, find fault with the wise creations of God's right hand in animals, trees, mountains, rivers, and grasses. They are satisfied with nothing. According to their absurd and gloomy view, there is no need in the world for night, winter, old age, labor, hunger, thirst, disease, or -- most of all -- death. What purpose does it serve? Ah, our poor, small knowledge, our tiny concepts! I think that we would govern the machinery tf the world the way a son brought up in lawlessness would govern his father's house. From where did these demons come to settle in our hearts? Are they not legion in us? But we ourselves have brought this primordial darkness with us; we were born with it.

Athanasius.
Why do you call opinions "demons"?

Gregory.
And what do you call them?

Athanasius.
I do not know.

Gregory.
But I do! In Greek a demon is called δαιμονιον.

Athanasius.
What follows from that?

Gregory.
The fact that δαιμονιον means "knowledge" or "comprehension," and δαιμων means "one who knows or comprehends." I beg you to forgive me for having given to small demons the name of a large demon

Longinus.
An illiterate man narred Marko -- according to the fable -- went to heaven. Saint Peter came out with his keys and, opening the heavenly gates for him, asked: "Have you studied the holy languages?" 'Not a one" answered the simple man. "Did you go to divinity school?" "Never, Holy Father." "Have you read the works of the ancient theologians?" "I have not read them; I don't know A from B." 'Then who has set you upon the path of peace?" ""Three little rules have done it." "Which rules are those?" "They are:
  1. 'Everything is good that is defined as such by holy men,'
  2. 'Whatever wicked men possess is of small account,'
  3. 'Do not wish for others what you do not wish for yourself.'
The first and second are home-grown rules; I thought them up myself. The tlird is a law of the Apostles, given for [men of] all tongues. The first rule has brought me true forbearance and gratitude of Job; the second has freed me frorm all worldly lusts; the third has reeconciled me with my inward Lord."

The Apostle, looking into his face, which was as bright as the sun, exclaimed: "Oh blessed and grateful soul! Enter into the dwelling of your Heavenly Fathher and rejoice eternally. Little have you eaten, but with much art you filled."

James.
Understanding is not generated by books, but books by understanding. He who has purified his reason with clear thought is like the zealous householder who digs a well of pure and living water in his house, as it is written: "Counsel in the heart of man is like deep water."35 "Drink waters out of your own cisterns, and running waters out of your own well."36 At the same time, if one nibbles at books, one can benefit much. from them. . . . [Msrko] ate little but chewed much, and from a tiny spark kindled a flame which embraced the universe. Do we know more than he? How many holy words have we thrown into our stomachs? And to what purposse? They have simply given us indigestion. Ah, you poor bleeding woman, who has a weak stomach! See the effect of the noxious phlegms vomited up by the serpent of the Apocalypse, against which Solomon warned his son: "Let [thy fountains] be only your own, and not strangers' with you."37

How can the peace of God -- the health, joy, and life of the soul -- find room in a heart filled with such bitter waters? Let us first seek out the spark of God's truth within us, which, lighting up our darkness, will bring us to the holy waters of Siloam to which the prophet summons us: "Wash you, make you clean, put away the evil of your doings. . . ."38 Here is your emetic! Is our life not a battle? But must we struggle with our serpent-like opinions? Is this not the most noble battle, of which Paul writes: "For we wrestle not against flesh and blood. . . ."39 Opinion and counsel is the seed and the principle. The head is nested in the heart. But what if it is a serpent's head? What if it is a bad seed and a kingdom of evil? What kind of peace can the heart expect from such a tyrant? He is a killer of men, who has watched from the beginning, who examines closely, who loves, and is master of, the darkness.

If the heart is filled up with such a bitter sea of opinions, if a pit of evil has swallowed up the soul, what light can we hope for among the dark swarm of sorrows? -- What joy and sweetness can we hope for where there is no light? -- What peace where there is neither life nor joy?- -- What life and peace where God is not? -- How can there be God without the spirit of truth and the spirit of dominion? -- How can the spirit of truth prevail without unworldly thoughts and purity of heart? -- How can there be purity which is not eternal -- as it is written: "His truth endureth to all generations"?40 -- How can that be eternal which is lost in contemplation and admiration of matter? -- How can that which respects matter fail to be lost in contemplation of it? -- How can one fail to depend upon it when one is concerned about the dissolution of his dust? Is this not to have the kind of heart of which it is written: "You knowest their hearts to be like ashes; they are deceived, and not one of them can deliver his soul"?41 Is this not a Fall and a sinful wandering away from God toward the idolatry of dust? Is this not the head of the serpent, of which it is written: "It will bruise your head"42 Hear, Yermolai! To ascend the mountain of peace one must take an emetic, purify his heart, cast out his old opinions, dm not return to his vomit. One must drink pure water, the water of new counsels, for all his days.

This is to move from baseness to mountain heights, from sorrow to sweetness, from death to life, from the puddles of swine to the springs of heaven. . . . Drink until rivers of living water from your bowels, slaking your most unhappy thirst, that is, your emptiness and dissatisfaction -- your envy, lust, boredom, murmuring, longing, fear, sorrow, remorse, and the sting of the other demons' heads which bring death into the soul. Drink ¦until you can sing: "Our soul is escaped as a bird . . .";43 "Blessed be the Lord, who hath not given us as a prey to their teeth."44 Drink until you can console yourself with Habakkuk, singing: "Thou woundest the head out of the house of the wicked" and "I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation";45 singing with Hannah: "My heart rejoiceth in the Lord . . .";46 singing with David: "Lord, lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us."47

Ancient opinion is a most powerful and cunning enemy. The Gospels tell us that it is difficult to seize and empty the vessel of opinion, once it has lodged in the heart. But what is sweeter than such labor, which brings back to our hearts a peace beyond price? Struggle from day to day and cast out at least one of them. Climb bravely from hour to hour up the mountain, declaring with David: "I will not turn back until the end of my days. . . ." This is the glorious slaughter of Sodom and Gomorrah from which Abram, the divine conqueror, returned.48

Gregory.
My friends, we live our lives away; our senseless days and minutes flow past. We produce whatever is needful to the flux of our days; but our chief concern should be for the peace of our soul, for its life, health, and salvation. "For what is a man profited, if he will gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"49 What will you find in the world so precious and profitable that you would venture to take it in exchange for your soul? . . .

In man the head of all things is the human heart. It is that which is most truly human in him; everything else is peripheral, as Jeremiah teaches: "Deep is the heart of man above all things; it is man, and who can know it?"50 Take heed, I beg of you: the heart is deep, and it is man. But what is the heart, if not the soul? What is the soul, if not a bottomless pit of thought? What is thought, if not the root, seed, and grain of all our flesh, blood , skin, and other outwardness? You see that a man who has destroyed the peace of his heart destroys his head and root.

Is he not like a walnut, the meat of which has been eaten away by worms, so that it has no strength left except in is shell? . . . Thought is the secret spring within our bodily machinery, the head and guiding principle of all its motion. The outward surface of the limbs follows this head like a tethered beast. Thought, like a flame or a flowing river, is never still. Its continuous striving is desire. A flame may die down, a river may cease to flow. But thought -- which is without matter, is free of all material elements, yet is clad in what is most corruptible, wearing it like a dead vestment (although it is within the body, and yet outside the body) -- thought can never halt its motion even for a moment. It continues its precipitate flight, speeding like lightning through eternities without bound and infinities without number.

What does it strive toward? It seeks its sweetness and pcnc but it does not find peace in standing still, or in being extended, like a dead body. This is alien and contrary to its living nature. Thought, like a traveler on the road, seeks its own likeness among the dead elements. Its thirst is not slaked, but rather intensified, by ignoble diversions. It moves the more rapidly from perishing material nature toward the supreme divine nature, the beginningless beginning or principle, which is akin to it, so that having been purified by its radiance and by the flame of its secret vision, it may free itself from its bodily earth and earthly body. And this is to enter into the peace of God, to purge oneself of all corruption, to move in complete freedom and without obstruction, flying from the narrow limits of matter to the freedom of the spirit, as it is written: "Thou hast enlarged my steps under me . . ."51 I bare you on eagles' wings, and brought you unto myself."52 And David exclaims: "Oh that I had wings like a dove! For then would I fly away, and be at rest."58

Yermolai.
But where does thought find this beginningless beginning and supreme nature?

Gregory.
If it does not first find it within itself, it will seek it in vain in other places. This is the task of the perfect in heart, but we should learn the alphabet of that most blessed Sabbath, or day of rest. . . . How remiss we are in winning and keeping that peace of the heart which is the most precious thing on earth or in Heaven! When a man is alone he should think only of this, when he is with others he should speak only of this -- whether he is at home or on a journey, lying down or getting up. But when do we think of it? Are not all of our conversations mere idle talk and demonic wind? Ah, we have known ourselves so little, forgetting the house not built with hands, and its head -- our soul, and what is central to the soul -- the God-like Heaven of Peace. Our just reward is that we can scarcely find one man among a thousand whose heart is not occupied by a garrison of several detachments of demons.

So long as we do not learn with Habakkuk to stand guard for God,54 and to continue this most profitable war, just so long do we make ourselves -- in our roots -- negligent, deaf, dumb, cowardly, unskilled, and generally weak fighters. . . . Thus, for example, one man worries because he is not well born, handsome of coutenance, or gently bred. Another is troubled because, although he leads a blameless life, many men, both high born and base, hate and disparage him, calling him worthless, hypocritical, a desperado. A third grieves because he has not attained the rank or station which would make it possible for him to serve dinners consisting of ten courses, and must be satisfied with only six. A fourth torments himself trying to hold onto an office which, though unpleasant, is profitable, so that in idleness he may not die of boredom, never realizing that nothing is more useful and important than the wise and pious governance both of one's external, domestic economy and of one's internal, spiritual economy -- that is, the knowing of oneself and the bringing of order into one's heart. A fifth makes himself miserable because, feeling in himself an ability to serve society, he is unable since there are so many candidates, to gain the position he seeks -- as though only those in government service have occasion to be virtuous, and as though service were different from good works, or good works from virtue. A sixth is filled with alarm because his hair has begun to turn grey, because pitiless old age is approaching hour by hour with its dreadful army, and behind it invincible death with yet another army. He worries because his aged body is growing weak, his eyes and teeth are failing, he no longer has the strength to dance, he can no longer eat and drink as heartily as he once could, or enjoy it as much, etc. . . .

Longinus.
But what kind of heart do we find in our forefathers of olden times? Who can remember Job without horror? But, despite his sufferings, it is written: "In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God foolishly." . . .55

Yermolai.
Ah, this peace is lofty and difficult to attain. How marvelous was [Job's] heart to be able to thank God for all things.

Longinus.
It is difficult, almost impossible, but it is worthy of the greatest effort. It is difficult, but without such peace all things are a thousand times more difficult. . . . "Take my yoke upon you, . . . and ye shall find rest unto your souls."56 How much effort do we expend to little purpose, often vainly, sometimes harmfully? To feed and clothe the body is difficult but necessary; we cannot get along without it. The bodily life consists in this, and no one should regret this effort, for without it we will fall into sore distress, into cold, hunger, thirst, and sickness.

But would it not be easier for you to live on rough herbs, having peace and consolation in your heart, than to dine at an overflowing table, and yet be like a whited sepulchre, filled with the unsleeping worms which gnaw at the soul day and night without rest? Is it not better to cover one's poor body with rags, having a heart clad in the vestments of salvation and the garments of joy, than to wear gold-brocaded clothes and yet bear the fire Gehenna at the center of one's soul, -- that fire which sears the heart with demonic grievings? What profit has a man who sits in his body, having every comfort, among the ornamented corners of his house, if his heart be plunged into the outer darkness of discontent . . .?

Why do you speak to me of difficulty? A man who has fallen into a pit or into deep waters thinks not of the difficulties but of saving himself. If you build a house, build it for both parts of your being -- body and soul. If you do deck and adorn the body, do not forget the heart. There are two kinds of bread, houses, garments -- two kinds of everything. All things are double, so that in each man there are two men; two fathers -- the heavenly and the earthly; two kinds of peace -- that which is eternal and that which is temporal; and two natures -- the divine and the bodily -- in all things. If one confuses these natures, acknowledging only the visible nature, one falls into idolatry; . . . if one lifts up his eyes even a little toward the blessed Nature we immediately cry out: it is difficult, difficult! This is calling the sweet bitter; but the righteous man lives by faith. And what is faith if not illumination or clarification of the unseen Nature as grasped by the heart?

Yermolai.
To me this seems rather obscure.

Longinus.
How could it fail to seem obscure to one who is wallowing in the mire of disbelief! I pray you, open your eye and purge tour sight. The kingdom of the blessed Nature, although it is hidden, is not without the witness of external signs. . . . All matter is but painted mud, muddied paint, and decorated dust. But the blessed Nature is a principle unto itself, that is, an invention which has no beginning, and a wise delineation which bears all the visible colors. These colors are fitted to its imperishable strength and nature, as a garment is fitted to the body. David himself calls the appearance of things a garment: "[Thou| coverest yourself with light as with a garment. . . ."57

To die with Christ is to leave behind one's elemental and impotent nature and enter into the wisdom of what is unseen and heavenly. He who has fallen in love with these sweet words has already made that transition: "The flesh is as nothing. . . ."58 Whatever perishes is flesh. It is here that Easter, the Resurrection, and the passage into the Promised Land have their relevance. Here the knee of Israel was bent before the Lord. All of the Prophets and Apostles dwell in the City of our God, upon His Holy Mountain, which is Peace to Israel.

Yermolai.
You speak darkly.

Athanasius.
You have so clogged your speech with scraps of Scripture that no one can understand it.

Longinus.
Dear friends, forgive my excessive attachment to this Book. I acknowledge my warmth and passion for it. From my earliest years a secret force, a kind of magic, has drawn me to morally edifying books; I love them most of all, for they heal and make glad the heart. I began to read the Bible in my thirtieth year. But this splendid Book won out over all my other loves, slaking my long hunger and thirst with the bread and water of God's truth and justice, which were sweeter to me than honey and the honeycomb. I feel my nature especially drawn toward them. I have fled, and I flee, under the guidance of my Lord, all the obstacles of life, and all carnal lovers, so that I might find peace and joy in the pure embrace of this daughter of God who is fairer than all the daughters of men. She has given birth for me out of her immaculate womb to that miraculous Adam . . . of whom Isaiah says: "Who shall declare his generation?"59

I can never wonder enough at the wisdom of the prophets. The most trivial details of their writings seem to me of great moment: who is in love always feels this way. There are many who find no flavor in the words: "Benjamin shall raven as a wolf; in the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night he shall divide the spoil."60. . . But they fill my heart with unspeakable joy the more I ruminate upon them. The more profound and unpeopled is my solitude, the happier is my life with her who is beloved among women. I am content with the fate which the Lord has given me. I was born a man, a complete and true human being, and I will not die childless. . . .

Gregory.
If you do not like Biblical nourishment, we can carry on our conversation in a different way. We have spent an entire Sunday morning in discussing what we should always think about. Tomorrow is a workday. However, when we gather, toward evening, let us speak as clearly as we can of the soul's peace. This subject is always worthy of our attention, for peace of soul is the purposed end and haven of all our life.

Notes

1. There is an untranslatable play on the words "polucheniye" ("receiving" or "getting") and "blagopoluchiye" ("well-being" or "welfare").

2. Probably a reference to the Owl of Minerva, traditional symbol of wisdom, frequently alluded to by Skovoroda in other works.

3. This expression actually occurs in Exodus (e.g., 3:14), rather than in Isaiah.

4. Prov. 20:5.

5. Ps. 4:17.

6. Acts 10:14; cf. 11:8.

7. Jer. 17:1.

8. Eph. 6:12.

9. The Russian proverb rhymes: "Ne krasen dom uglami, krasen pirogami."

10. Traditional Russian symbols of welcome and hospitality.

11. The name "Ish" suggests "searching" or "quest."

12. The name "Mut" suggests "trouble" or "disturbance."

13. The Russian rhymes: "Mut ot Isha ne razluchitsya."

14. There is a play on the words "Ish" and "ishchem" ("we seek").

15. John 14:27.

16. Cf. Exod. 3:14; Isa. 41:4.

17. Cf. Ps. 16:11.

18. Compare the English saying: "Red sky at night, sailor's delight; red sky in the morning, sailors take warning."

19. One arshin equals 28 inches.

20. Ps. 1:3.

21. II Thess. 5:18.

22. The reference is to Epicurus, To Menoeceus, 130, 9-10.

23. Cf. Gen. 14:18-20.

24. Ps. 24:7.

25. Ps. 84:1.

26. Eccles. 5:18. Skovoroda actually says: "Blessed is it. . . ."

27. Cf. II Kings 5:10. ". . . Go and wash in Jordan seven times, and thy flesh shall come again to thee, and thou shalt be clean."

28. Cf. Rev. 21:4.

29. Ps. 119:137.

30. Cf. Gen. 15:6.

31. Cf. Ps. 52:9.

32. I Thess. 5:18.

33. Isa. 58:11-12.

34. The Russian term "mneniye," like the German "Meinung," suggests "self-centered" or "selfish" opinion.

35. Prov. 20:5.

36. Prov. 5:15.

37. Prov. 5:17.

38. Isa. 1:16.

39. Eph. 6:12.

40. Ps. 100:5.

41. Skovoroda's rendering of this verse (Isa. 44:20) follows the Church Slavonic and Septuagint texts. The King James version is significantly different: "He feedeth on ashes: a deceived heart hath turned him aside, that he cannot deliver his soul. . . ." Old Testament scholars inform me that the King James version here follows the Hebrew text.

42. Gen. 3:15.

43. Ps. 124:7.

44. Ps. 124:6.

45. Hab. 3:13, 18.

46. I Sam. 2:1.

47. Ps. 4:6.

48. Cf. Gen. ch. 14.

49. Matt. 16:26.

50. Skovoroda's rendering of this verse (Jer. 17:9) -- "Gluboko serdse cheloveku (pache vsekh) i chelovek yest, i kto poznayet yevo?" -- is a litteral translation of the Septuagint Greek; «Βαθεια η καρδια παρα παντα, και ανθρωπος εστιν, και τις γνωσεται αυτον.» The Church Slavonic version: "Stroptivo serdste cheloveku, i ne ispytanno, i kto yevo poznayet?" ("The heart of man is unruly, and unexplored, and who can know it?") is intermediate between this and the King James version: "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked, and who can know it?" Skovorda clearly wishes to assert (with the Septuagint) that the "heart," i.e., intention and volition, is deep and hidden from view, not (with the King James version) that it is deceitful and wicked. Old Testament scholars inform me that the King James version here follows the Hebrew text except that the Hebrew words rendered by "desperately wicked" should be translated as "exceedingly weak."

51. Ps. 18:36.

52. Exod. 19:4.

53. Ps. 55:6.

54. Cf. Hab. 2:1.

55. Job 1:22.

56. Matt. 11:30.

57. Ps. 104:2.

58. Cf. Isa. 40:6: "All flesh is grass. . . ."

59. Isa. 53:8.

60. Gen. 49:27.