Tuesday, January 3, 2012

The Young Hero: Dreamer of Dreams

Dreamer
collage, jr-s 1998

           Today, from my Persian Poets Augury Box, I randomly picked a little paper roll-up, unrolled it, and read:

            The old man ran from the young hero's bow
            Straight down the mountain quick as he could go...
                   Ferdowsi, The Book of Kings, (transl. Dick Davis)


Persian Poets Augury Box
jr-s, 2011
                
         How apposite.  Lately I've been thinking about a certain cultural figure: "the young hero."  The Persian term for the young hero is javanmardi.  I came upon it while reading Peter Kingsley's In the Dark Places of Wisdom.  Kingsley equates the term with the ancient Greek title kouros (a word older than the Greek language).  For the young hero, chronological age is beside the point.  He's "needed for prophesy," Kingsley notes, "for receiving oracles, for the magical process of lying down in a special place at night to obtain messages from the gods through dreams."           
            Dreaming is a gift of the youthful spirit.  One who is old in spirit will talk a dream to death.  But the young hero (who may be 19 or 100 years old) can shoot down a visionless oldster (who may be 19 or 100 years old) in an instant.  So the oldster flees the young hero's bow. Which reminds me of Athena, the Greek Goddess of Wisdom.  She's the best archer, hunter and warrior. She never loses a fight and is an eternally pure, flashing-eyed, beautiful maiden.  She/he -- doesn't matter – the javanmardi is evolved "beyond time," gone "to the heart of reality" to find "what never ages or dies," Kingsley writes.
            I'm glad to discover the expression javanmardi because it clears up one of the mysteries of my life:  I always wondered why the Bab and Baha'u'llah, even when past the age for it, called themselves and each other Youth. Now I have the cultural root:  the tradition of javanmardi or, in Arabic, fata.             
According to my current Farsi teacher the javanmardi spirit is passion, specifically bravery and the willingness to give oneself entirely, to be a sacrifice.  Javanmardi is a virtue, a godly attribute.           
            Javanmardi animates Tahirih's verse and that of her brother and sister mystics who have that spirit.  Someone always has that spirit.  According to tradition, true javanmardis live as earth lives, "often ignored and almost always misunderstood," to quote Kingsley, but they "keep existing because they have to."  We're never without them.  We can open our eyes, look through past and present time and find them.  One of my favorite poems, Ode, by young Arthur O'Shaughnessy (1844-1881), says it well.  It's a one-hit-wonder, but it's all O'Shaughnessy needed to do –

            We are the music-makers,
                 And we are the dreamers of dreams,
            Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
                 And sitting by desolate streams;
             World-losers and world-forsakers,
                 On whom the pale moon gleams:
             Yet we are the movers and shakers
                  Of the world forever, it seems.

            With wonderful deathless ditties
                 We build up the world's great cities,
             And out of a fabulous story
                  We fashion an empire's glory:
             One man with a dream, at pleasure,
                   Shall go forth and conquer a crown;
             And three with a new song's measure
                    Can trample an empire down.

            We, in the ages lying
                    In the buried past of the earth,
             Built Ninevah with our sighing,
                    And Babel itself with our mirth;
             And o'erthrew them with prophesying
                     To the old of the new world's worth;
            For each age is a dream that is dying,
                     Or one that is coming to birth.
    





           
            




1 comment:

  1. A HEARTENING OBSERVATION: My friend Cathy, who tried to post a comment but couldn't get it to work, pointed out that it's great to know you can be a hero without getting up. I.e., you can be a hero lying down. For those of us who are aging young heroes, that's so encouraging...

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