Eight Oh Seven
Eight Oh Seven
True colours do begin to show. In the absence of any
organizing influence, the rebellion latent — and obvious to only a
few observant — in so many rises like a green film to the surface of
life.
Man in general is not a civilized being, and has not been
for almost one hundred years. The days of gaslamps and hansoms and the last
of the steamships were man’s last days of full and true civilization.
Now civilization is provided for — or hung upon — the many by
the few.
Few there be who still know what consitutes actual
civility. To most it is in this chimera of electric lights and Roman
running water and then that fifth of the simple machines, the internal
combustion engine. Deprived of these that separate most men from the
animals, they swing from trees.
Clothing becomes at best a somehow-still-necessary
annoyance and at worst illogical and optional. Crisp and trim dormitories
take on the look of Manhattan slum apartments with unwashed clothes hanging
from the windows to dry the sweat. An awful din of cleanup from the
Czar’s† violent visit thickens the air with
chainsaws, chippers, and pressure washers; and the utterly
non-sophisticates (revealed by their now loosely-regulated dress) make my
campus — my den of sophistication — look like downtown Gary,
Indiana.
Houses bisected by hurricanes happen: there is nothing
unconquerable about such damage. Trees will be uprooted — testimony
to their foolish stand against the inevitable. A diadem of roots shading
where I stand bodes no ill at all.
The clock stopped. Windows can be deglazed, and
fenestrated storeys boarded over, and still I would not breather
“savagery”. But for days, imposingly erect and yet unlit, the
tower has read “eight oh seven”.
Eight oh seven is when civilization ceased as an
imposition upon savagery. Eight oh seven, two mornings ago. How Golding is
proven, even in macrocosm◊ and two days’ time!
Eight oh seven, and all is not well.
† This is in reference to Hurricane Ivan. The Czar has deprived most of Pensacola, Florida of water and power.
◊ William Golding, author of Lord of the Flies. LOTF was set among a small group of boys on a deserted island: a microcosm of society (sans restraint).
Crosspost: Scraps and Academic Musings
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