NOTE: This newsletter might be cut short by your email program. [View it in full](.  If a friend forwarded it to you and you'd like your very own newsletter, [subscribe here]( â it's free.  Need to modify your subscription? You can [change your email address]( or [unsubscribe](. [The Marginalian]( [Welcome] Hello {NAME}! This is the midweek edition of [The Marginalian]( by Maria Popova â one piece resurfaced from the seventeen-year archive as timeless uplift for heart, mind, and spirit. If you missed last week's archival resurrection â Anaïs Nin on vacation and the art of presence â you can catch up [right here](. And if my labor of love enriches your life in any way, please consider supporting it with a [donation]( â it remains free and ad-free and alive thanks to reader patronage. If you already donate: I appreciate you more than you know. [FROM THE ARCHIVE | The Ocean and the Meaning of Life]( This essay is adapted from [Figuring](. June of 1952, the United States Fish & Wildlife Service received a letter of resignation from its most famous marine biologist. On the line requesting the reason for resignation, she had stated plainly: âTo devote my time to writing.â But she was also leaving for the freedom to use her public voice as an instrument of change, awakening the worldâs ecological conscience with her [bold open letters]( holding the government accountable for its exploitation of nature. Fifteen years earlier, at age twenty-nine, Rachel Carson (May 27, 1907âApril 14, 1964) had gotten her start at the lowest rungs of the government agency as a field aide hired at $6.50 an hour. Wading through tide pools and annual marine census reports as a junior aquatic biologist, she had found her voice as a writer with an uncommon gift for walking the teeming shoreline between the scientific and the poetic. In an unexampled essay that eventually bloomed into [The Sea Around Us]( which won her the National Book Award, she had [invited the human imagination undersea]( into a world then more mysterious than the Moon. Now, forty-five and finally free from the day-job by which she had been supporting her mother, her sister, and the young nephew she adopted and raised as her son after her sisterâs death, Carson set out to fulfill her childhood dream of living by the ocean. Rachel Carson After searching along the New England coast, she fell in love with West Southport â a picturesque island in Maine, nestled among evergreens and oaks in the estuary of the Sheepscot River, where seals frequented the beach and whales billowed by as though torn from the pages of her beloved Melville. With her book royalties, she bought a plot of land on which to build a cottage. In a touching testament to her orientation to the natural world, she felt deeply uncomfortable thinking of herself as its âownerâ â a âstrange and inappropriate wordâ â of this âperfectly magnificent piece of Maine shoreline.â There, she would soon meet [her soul mate]( whose love would bolster Carsonâs moral courage in [catalyzing the environmental movement]( there, she would compose her next book, dedicating it to her beloved Dorothy for having gone down with her âinto the low-tide worldâ and âfelt its beauty and its mystery.â [The Edge of the Sea]( was an ambitious guide to the seashore â the place where Carson found âa sense of the unhurried deliberation of earth processes that move with infinite leisure, with all eternity at their disposalâ; the strange and wondrous boundary the [ocean-loving Whitman]( had once extolled as âthat suggesting, dividing line, contact, junction⦠blending the real and ideal, and each made portion of the other.â The book was also an admonition against what we stand to lose â writing in the early 1950s, Carson noted the systematically documented and âwell recognizedâ fact of global climate change. But was primarily a celebration, for that is always the most effective instrument of admonition â a celebration of what we have and what we are, an ode to âhow that marvelous, tough, vital, and adaptable something we know as LIFE has come to occupy one part of the sea world and how it has adjusted itself and survived despite the immense, blind forces acting upon it from every side.â Spring Moon at Ninomiya Beach, 1931 â one of Hasui Kawaseâs [stunning vintage Japanese woodblocks](. (Available [as a print]( Inevitably, in telling the story of life, the book takes on an existential undertone, rendered symphonic under Carsonâs poetic pen. Watching the fog engulf the rocks beneath her study window as the night tide rolls in, she considers the totality of being, which the worldâs oceans contour and connect: Hearing the rising tide, I think how it is pressing also against other shores I know â rising on a southern beach where there is no fog, but a moon edging all the waves with silver and touching the wet sands with lambent sheen, and on a still more distant shore sending its streaming currents against the moonlit pinnacles and the dark caves of the coral rock. Then in my thoughts these shores, so different in their nature and in the inhabitants they support, are made one by the unifying touch of the sea. For the differences I sense in this particular instant of time that is mine are but the differences of a moment, determined by our place in the stream of time and in the long rhythms of the sea. Once this rocky coast beneath me was a plain of sand; then the sea rose and found a new shore line. And again in some shadowy future the surf will have ground these rocks to sand and will have returned the coast to its earlier state. And so in my mindâs eye these coastal forms merge and blend in a shifting, kaleidoscopic pattern in which there is no finality, no ultimate and fixed reality â earth becoming fluid as the sea itself. The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Japanese artist Hokusai, 1831. (Available [as a print]( and [as a face mask]( benefitting The Nature Conservancy.) The year of Carsonâs death, as Dorothy scattered her ashes into the rocking bay, James {NAME} would echo these existential undertones in his poetic insistence that [ânothing is fixed, forever and forever and forever⦠the sea does not cease to grind down rock.â]( Carson â still alive, still islanded for a mortal moment in the ocean of ongoingness â adds: On all these shores there are echoes of past and future: of the flow of time, obliterating yet containing all that has gone before; of the seaâs eternal rhythms â the tides, the beat of surf, the pressing rivers of the currents â shaping, changing, dominating; of the stream of life, flowing as inexorably as any ocean current, from past to unknown future. [â¦] Contemplating the teeming life of the shore, we have an uneasy sense of the communication of some universal truth that lies just beyond our grasp. What is the message signaled by the hordes of diatoms, flashing their microscopic lights in the night sea? What truth is expressed by the legions of the barnacles, whitening the rocks with their habitations, each small creature within finding the necessities of its existence in the sweep of the surf? And what is the meaning of so tiny a being as the transparent wisp of protoplasm that is a sea lace, existing for some reason inscrutable to us â a reason that demands its presence by the trillion amid the rocks and weeds of the shore? The meaning haunts and ever eludes us, and in its very pursuit we approach the ultimate mystery of Life itself. Art from Geographical Portfolio â Comprising Physical, Political, Geological, and Astronomical Geography by Levi Walter Yaggy, 1887. (Available [as a print]( benefitting The Nature Conservancy.) As The Edge of the Sea alighted in the world, critical praise and honors came cascading, trailed by invitations for lectures and acceptance speeches. Always uncomfortable with attention and public appearances, Carson became even more selective, prioritizing womenâs associations and nonprofit cultural institutions over glamorous commercial stages. When she did speak, her words became almost a consecration, as in a speech she delivered before a convocation of librarians: When we go down to the lowest of the low tide lines and look down into the shallow waters, thereâs all the excitement of discovering a new world. Once you have entered such a world, its fascination grows and somehow you find your mind has gained a new dimension, a new perspective â and always thereafter you find yourself remember[ing] the beauty and strangeness and wonder of that world â a world that is as real, as much a part of the universe, as our own. Rachel Carson, 1951 Savor more of Carsonâs lyrical reverence for the sea and the strange wonder of life in [Figuring](. Couple this fragment with a [stunning illustrated celebration of our water world]( based on Indian mythology, then revisit Carsonâs life-tested wisdom on [writing and the loneliness of creative work]( the story of [how her writing sparked the environmental movement]( and Neil Gaimanâs [poetic tribute to her legacy](. [Forward to a friend]( Online]( on Facebook]( donating=loving
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KINDRED READINGS: [The Beach and the Soul: Anne Morrow Lindbergh on the Benedictions of the Sea]( * * * [Rachel Carson on Writing and the Loneliness of Creative Work]( * * * [The Sea and the Soul: Poet, Painter, and Philosopher Etel Adnan on the Elemental Blues of Being]( AND A PASSIONATE SIDE PROJECT: [An Almanac of Birds: Divinations for Uncertain Days]( [---]( You're receiving this email because you subscribed on TheMarginalian.org (formerly BrainPickings.org). This weekly newsletter comes out each Wednesday and offers a hand-picked piece worth revisiting from my 15-year archive.
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