Hope, a Myth Reawakened. Lillian Moats

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Название Hope, a Myth Reawakened
Автор произведения Lillian Moats
Жанр Сказки
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Издательство Сказки
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780966957662



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      A NOTE TO THE READER

      Hope, a Myth Reawakened was written with intentional line breaks. In order to see the formatting as the author intended, we encourage you to calibrate your settings by using the line below to optimize the line length and character size on your reading device. Please adjust the size of the text on your viewer so that the words below appear on one line, if possible:

      to see her stroke his indigo feathers with her fingertip,

      Viewing this title at a larger font size or on a device too small to accommodate the longest lines in the text will cause the reading experience to be altered; that is, a long single line will be displayed as multiple lines. If this occurs, the turn of the line will be marked with a shallow indent.

      Thank you for taking the time to adjust your settings. We hope you enjoy Hope, a Myth Reawakened.

HOPE,

      HOPE,

      A MYTH REAWAKENED

      LILLIAN MOATS

      Downers Grove

      Illinois

      THREE ARTS PRESS

      1100 Maple Ave.

      Downers Grove, IL 60515-4818

       threeartspress.com

      Text © Lillian Moats, 2014

      Published 2015 by Three Arts Press. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other, without written permission from the publisher.

      Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication

      (Provided by Quality Books, Inc)

      Moats, Lillian.

      Hope, a myth reawakened / Lillian Moats.

      pages cm

      LCCN 2015902533

      ISBN 978-0-9669576-5-5

      Ebook ISBN 978-0-9669576-6-2

      1. Hope--Fiction. 2. Despair--Fiction.

      3. Allegories. 4. Prose poems. I. Title.

PS3569.O6523H67 2015 813'.54
QBI15-600057

      Edited by Pamela Livingston Gifford

      Author photo by JP Somersaulter

      Prepress by John Lord at Graphics Plus Inc.

      Printed in USA on acid free archival quality paper by BookMobile

      3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

      First Edition

      Also by the Author:

      The Letter from Death

      Speak, Hands

      Legacy of Shadows

      The Gate of Dreams

      Books and eBooks

      are available from major booksellers

      and threeartspress.com

      Distributed by Itasca Books, Minneapolis

       itascabooks.com

      ISBN 978-0-9669576-5-5 paperback

      ISBN 9978-0-9669576-6-2 eBook

      To family …

      Michael and David and Chris

      And “family” …

      JP and Paula, Pamela and Pam

      A NOTE OF INTRODUCTION

      At this moment in history we find ourselves well beyond the consolation offered by the proverbial Chinese sentiment that we might live in “interesting times.” Ours is rather a time of terror, a time when natural systems and social systems are collapsing before our very eyes, a time when optimism has become a symptom of delusion. Hope is elusive, even in the best of times, but among the informed of our age it is nearly unimaginable. Yet we know deep down that there is no hope without Hope.

      Lillian Moats aspires to reawaken in us a sense of hope in an age dominated by confusion, trepidation and despair. Her allegory seduces readers into serious reflections on the nature and sources of hope. The language herein is inviting, the insights are abundant, and the suspense is captivating. Perhaps you will detect, as I did, hints of Dante and Plato as the author engages Hope and Despair in constructive dialogue. This book is inspiring, and you are to be envied if you can find something better to do than to read it.

      Loyal Rue

      Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and Religion

      Luther College

      PREFACE

      If you have picked up this little book and thumbed through a few pages, the arrangement of lines might prompt you to regard it as poetry; I don’t think of it as such. The format reflects the writing process I use to remind myself to be concise and attend to the rhythm of language. If I were reading aloud to you (which would be fun for me since I’m a one-to-one person) I would not pause to indicate line breaks as poets often do. So be my guest and read right through.

      On a deeper plane, where did the idea of such a book come from? Most of us speak of hope frequently—cheerfully, nervously or fervently—and yet in our more somber moods we ask ourselves and each other, “Is there any hope?” I am one who has struggled hard with that question, especially in the last decade or so as I’ve become more painfully conscious of the condition of our world.

      But perhaps my unease, and yours if you feel it, may be as old as humanity. This is what led me to turn to a classical myth and let my own allegorical extension of it reach into the present. The ancient Greeks expressed the conundrum of hope in the multiple and contradictory myths of a fateful “gift” from the gods to the first humans.

      The gift was contained in a storage jar or urn. (In the Pandora myth it was translated as “box” centuries later). Did this gift from the gods contain evils as collective punishment, or blessings? Who let the contents escape? The first woman, cunning and curious, or a foolish man?

      Hope is a central theme in these ancient myths, for in each rendition it is the only element not released from the jar. Scholars still debate whether hope’s perpetual containment conveys optimism or pessimism.

      HOPE, a Myth Reawakened is an invitation to join me in an allegorical adventure, grappling with the age-old question that has taken on pressing relevance in our contemporary lives: Is there hope for the world?

      Lillian Moats

      2015

      I. HOPE, FORLORN

      Now that I’ve grown in understanding,

      I will tell you my mother’s story:

      hers was the longest solitary confinement

      in the history of the world.

      Held without charge, without recourse

      to any system