From East of Eden:
I think the tool or weapon to which Steinbeck refers is in fact dormant. We will learn somehow to retrieve it. It must be rediscovered and chosen. Nothing is given anymore.
From East of Eden: It wasn't very long until all the land in the barren hills near King City and San Ardo was taken up, and ragged families were scattered…
From East of Eden:
I think the tool or weapon to which Steinbeck refers is in fact dormant. We will learn somehow to retrieve it. It must be rediscovered and chosen. Nothing is given anymore.
It was very nice to see this quote on my semi-regular check of this blog. I agree that we 21st cen. Americans are crippled by our doubts and guilt and seeming desire to dwell in both, and furthermore (skipping ahead a couple hundred pages), I don’t think anyone believes “timshel” enough to even try anymore.
ML–T.S. Eliot says somewhere in his Four Quartets that “The mystery of evil is a pit too deep for human eyes to plumb.” In East of Eden Steinbeck is trying to plumb that pit, and an inescapable pit it would be for all of us were it not for freedom to choose something other than iniquity.
Timshel is that tool that is at the center of what gives humans their fundamental dignity, and you could say that it points to another mystery which is also impenetrable by human eyes. There is a lifeline thrown to us and we can choose to hold onto it and in doing so discover ourselves, or if we choose not to we become servants one way or the other to the will to power.
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