Heaven

A Riddle?

                   #381

             The Dark Night

I saw myself in Heaven

One dark and starry night;

No one else was there though,

Which gave me a ghastly fright.

 

"Where are all the people?"

I cried to the star-lit sky?

The answer came down quickly,

"Those who've learned to die

Frolic in the sun-lit meadows

With God's Angels from on High."

Thoughts on literature or Timeout...

Paragraph #1

I love literature, primarily because I love stories, adventures; and at the heart of all great literature is an exciting, compelling story—an adventure.  Dante, the character in The Divine Comedy, for example, must journey through Hell, see it (really see it, both within and without) and put it beneath him or behind him (that is, reject it absolutely), if he would be saved from it. He must then climb the incredibly steep Mt. Purgatory and ascend through the circles of Heaven if he would see and know what the romantic love of his life (the Florentine young lady, Beatrice) truly means.  His adventure, like many quest adventures, begins in a Dark Wood, which leads immediately to Hell, a hideous, horrible and terrifyingly dangerous place; Purgatory begins with one of the most beautiful images in literature, the Ship of Souls ferrying the redeemed to the shores of the mountain; Purgatory itself is an arduous climb and a mixture of extremely terrifying images and extremely beautiful images in that each circle of Purgatory is governed by an angelic splendor, an Angel embodying the virtue of the circle.  Dante’s angels are beings to be taken seriously, aesthetically and intellectually.  In Heaven Dante’s ascent to God is now easy physically (he and Beatrice rise like helium-filled balloons); but Heaven is intellectually and theologically rigorous (there is even a test); Purgatory created in Dante a mind fully awake; Heaven is what the fully awakened mind truly understands about the universe of which it is a part; Heaven is also a study in the image of light and its increasing splendors.