A Heart Aflame, a Soul Enchanted
Talk #38 from Reflections On Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet
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"There are only three fundamental questions in life: beauty, truth and good. Perhaps these are the three faces of God, the real trinity. And all are as indefinable as God is. The profoundest minds have..."
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"There are only three fundamental questions in life: beauty, truth and good. Perhaps these are the three faces of God, the real trinity. And all are as indefinable as God is. The profoundest minds have..."
Osho continues:
"The question is not arising out of ignorance, neither is it arising out of mere borrowed knowledge. The question is arising from an existential experience. The poet knows in every cell of his being what beauty is, but is unable to bring that experience to expression.
"Once a great poet of India, Rabindranath Tagore, was asked after he was given the Nobel Prize on one of his collections of poems, 'Have you ever been concerned about beauty, about what it is?'
"He said, 'Concerned? I am possessed! I know what it is. I have tasted the wine and I have been drunk, but every effort to express the taste and the experience of being drunk has failed. All my poems are nothing but failures. Again and again I have been trying to express what beauty is, and again and again I have failed. I will go on trying to the very last breath, but deep down I know perhaps I'm asking for the impossible.'
"The question is arising from a poet who has seen beauty, who has loved beauty, who has felt its magic touch, who has danced with it, whose days and nights are nothing but a continuous flow of experiencing deeper and deeper realms of beauty. Still, to express it, to define it, seems to be impossible. His question is very authentic and sincere.
"Kahlil Gibran tries to answer the poet in the most beautiful way, the most profound way, and comes very close to the definition; yet he has not been able to define it. But he has pointed his finger toward the moon. He may not have reached the moon, but he has indicated the right direction. Very few people have come so close.
"One of the great philosophers of the contemporary world, G.E. Moore, has written a book Principia Ethica. The whole book, two hundred and fifty pages of very subtle and complex logical argument, is centered on only one question: what is good? And as you read his book, you think perhaps he is going to find it.
"He takes great plunges into the depths, flights into the heights, but in the end he sums up by saying that good is indefinable: 'I accept my failure."
"Once a great poet of India, Rabindranath Tagore, was asked after he was given the Nobel Prize on one of his collections of poems, 'Have you ever been concerned about beauty, about what it is?'
"He said, 'Concerned? I am possessed! I know what it is. I have tasted the wine and I have been drunk, but every effort to express the taste and the experience of being drunk has failed. All my poems are nothing but failures. Again and again I have been trying to express what beauty is, and again and again I have failed. I will go on trying to the very last breath, but deep down I know perhaps I'm asking for the impossible.'
"The question is arising from a poet who has seen beauty, who has loved beauty, who has felt its magic touch, who has danced with it, whose days and nights are nothing but a continuous flow of experiencing deeper and deeper realms of beauty. Still, to express it, to define it, seems to be impossible. His question is very authentic and sincere.
"Kahlil Gibran tries to answer the poet in the most beautiful way, the most profound way, and comes very close to the definition; yet he has not been able to define it. But he has pointed his finger toward the moon. He may not have reached the moon, but he has indicated the right direction. Very few people have come so close.
"One of the great philosophers of the contemporary world, G.E. Moore, has written a book Principia Ethica. The whole book, two hundred and fifty pages of very subtle and complex logical argument, is centered on only one question: what is good? And as you read his book, you think perhaps he is going to find it.
"He takes great plunges into the depths, flights into the heights, but in the end he sums up by saying that good is indefinable: 'I accept my failure."
More Information
| Publisher | Osho International |
|---|---|
| Duration of Talk | 129 mins |
| File Size | 31.77 MB |
| Type | Individual Talks |
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