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T-shirt, "Out of the Darkness Walk," Dallas, Oct. 29, 2022 |
My wife asked me about my hopes for 2023, and I began to unspool the usual litany: a new book, get in better shape, fix up the house more. I don't know if those really count as "hopes" — "goals" might be more accurate. What's the difference? "Hope" seems more passive, scanning the sky, waiting for the arrival of something out of your control. While a "goal" is the mountaintop you set your sites on while climbing. Goals are better, more active.
Then again, I'm down on "hope" lately, set against it by an aphorism of all things.
I was going over an old post about hope — Hope is the thumb you suck waiting for things to get worse — and one saying, that seems to have slipped past in 2014, stung now: ""Hope makes a good breakfast but a poor dinner," offered by a reader, Tom, quoting Francis Bacon.
Aphorisms are dubious currency. Easy to spend — I sure fling them around — often overly familiar, worn smooth,or directly contradictory. If "Time is money" and "Love of money is the root of all evil," then is time the root of all evil? I sure hope not. (Although, on second thought...)
Aphorisms are dubious currency. Easy to spend — I sure fling them around — often overly familiar, worn smooth,or directly contradictory. If "Time is money" and "Love of money is the root of all evil," then is time the root of all evil? I sure hope not. (Although, on second thought...)
Aphorisms sound good. That doesn't make them actually valuable.
As frequently happens quoting such truisms, Tom got the wording slightly wrong. Bacon, a scholar, scientist, politician, contemporary of Shakespeare (who sometimes is credited with writing some of the Bard's plays) was famous for coining phrases. His death in 1621 did not stem his publications, and the second edition of his 1661 Resuscitatio contains numbered vignettes, "Apophthegms New and Old."
In No. 36, Bacon meets fishermen casting at a river and offers to buy their catch. They ask for 30 shillings; Bacon offers them 10. They refuse, so he settles down to watch them (the tale smacks more of a set-up for the line than reporting). After they catch nothing, Bacon chides them: "Are you not mad fellows now, that might have had an angel in your purse, to have made merry withal, and to have warmed you thoroughly, and now you must go home with nothing."
"Ay but," reply the fisherman, "we had hope then to make a better gain of it."
As frequently happens quoting such truisms, Tom got the wording slightly wrong. Bacon, a scholar, scientist, politician, contemporary of Shakespeare (who sometimes is credited with writing some of the Bard's plays) was famous for coining phrases. His death in 1621 did not stem his publications, and the second edition of his 1661 Resuscitatio contains numbered vignettes, "Apophthegms New and Old."
In No. 36, Bacon meets fishermen casting at a river and offers to buy their catch. They ask for 30 shillings; Bacon offers them 10. They refuse, so he settles down to watch them (the tale smacks more of a set-up for the line than reporting). After they catch nothing, Bacon chides them: "Are you not mad fellows now, that might have had an angel in your purse, to have made merry withal, and to have warmed you thoroughly, and now you must go home with nothing."
"Ay but," reply the fisherman, "we had hope then to make a better gain of it."
"Well, my masters," says Bacon. "Then I'll tell you, hope is a good breakfast, but it is a bad supper."
Meaning that hope has value early in the day, but curdles as evening falls. Which every ambitious person has to keep in mind as the years slip past, and whatever you'd thought might have been, dances away, unachieved, forever out of reach, a will-o-the-wisp.
That's the problem with hope, its contains its own parasitic twin, disappointment. Hope is writing a check to yourself. Sometimes it get cashed. Usually it doesn't. After a while, the overdrafts pile up. Thus late-in-the-day hope takes on a delusional quality.
Meaning that hope has value early in the day, but curdles as evening falls. Which every ambitious person has to keep in mind as the years slip past, and whatever you'd thought might have been, dances away, unachieved, forever out of reach, a will-o-the-wisp.
That's the problem with hope, its contains its own parasitic twin, disappointment. Hope is writing a check to yourself. Sometimes it get cashed. Usually it doesn't. After a while, the overdrafts pile up. Thus late-in-the-day hope takes on a delusional quality.
What to do? Abandoning hope — for a certain level of success, say — sounds like surrender. It clashes with a favorite aphorism from Dr. Johnson, "I will be conquered; I will not capitulate." So the hell with Francis Bacon, throwing shade on the adored blankie that's carried by so many over the years. It may not be much, threadbare and tattered and stained. But it got us this far. No getting rid of it now.