I remember being stirred by "Invictus" when I first read it, sometime in my mid-teens. But now, when I read it - and knowing full well that the "clutch of circumstance" Henley refers to involved real suffering, worse than I have ever experienced - it no longer has that effect. I admire its technique, honor its candor and courage, but I just don't feel that way anymore. My own sense of things, the older I get - and I am at an age where old means old - is nearer to what Eliot says in "East Coker":
The only wisdom we can hope to acquire
Is the wisdom of humility: humility is endless.
Many thanks for the T.S. Eliot lines. Even approaching 60 this week, I can agree.
ReplyDeleteI suppose South Sudan may offer many incentives for that. Tell us more.
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