Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Page 91

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Page 91
know thyself 73 Worm: You let Ant entice you away from me and lure you into his house— Butterfl-y: In other people’s dreams We do so many things of which we are innocent. 'Worm: I wronged myself and Fire- Ky in rejecting her guidance. It makes no difference whether we did Wrong waking or dreaming, since the result is that this garden is like an orchard after the Fall. Butterfly: If I did wrong in your dream, I did so unintentionally and unwittingly, and am therefore inno- oent. When dreaming, you are innocent of what you have done Wrong while waking. When you Wake up, you are innocent of any Wrongdoing committed while hreaming. There is reason to be- believe that you are without guilt when you awake to the life beyond, and that there is no sin. Or it may that sin pertains to the body alone and will die with it, and that the soul has always been guiltless and will so part from the body— Worm: Unless actions in a dream are as real as actions in a state of Wakefulness; unless life after death Js as real as the present life; and unless man is not one but two Persons at once, each in his own w°rld and eac'h responsible for the netions of the other. Firefly enters from the left. Butter- fly starts. Worm and Firefly look at each other in silence, beside them- selves with joy. Firefly: Now you will never leave me. Worm: No, never, never! All at once this orchard is Paradise. Firefly: Its merit does not lie in the nutritiousness of its fruits but rather in the fact that its fruits are fragrant and capable of becoming lovely in the sunshine, and that nightingales come into the forest. What you see around us has potentialities for something higher, and that which is higher has potentialities for some- thing higher still, and so on. The nightingales have begun sing- ing. It is completely dark. Firefly lifts the hem of her mantle to both sides so that it resembles wings. Her dress starts to glow with a golden red light. This causes Butterfly’s dress to scintillate as if studded with iridescent gems; the oranges on the trees become flaming fireballs; and the reflection on the dew glit- ters like molten gold poured over mercury. As Firefly lets her hem down, everything turns dark and disappears. This she does at regular intervals—it is alternately light and dark—while to the song of the night- ingales she performs a dance re- sembling flight. After a while the nightingales grow still. Firefly stops, holding up the hem of her mantle so that the radiance remains. Worm: You dance the dance of light and darkness. Firefly: It is the dance of bliss and pain—of love. Worm: God be praised that I only dreamed that I refused your guid- ance. Firefly: It was real. Worm: But why is Butterfly here? Firefly: You said you were going to
Page 1
Page 2
Page 3
Page 4
Page 5
Page 6
Page 7
Page 8
Page 9
Page 10
Page 11
Page 12
Page 13
Page 14
Page 15
Page 16
Page 17
Page 18
Page 19
Page 20
Page 21
Page 22
Page 23
Page 24
Page 25
Page 26
Page 27
Page 28
Page 29
Page 30
Page 31
Page 32
Page 33
Page 34
Page 35
Page 36
Page 37
Page 38
Page 39
Page 40
Page 41
Page 42
Page 43
Page 44
Page 45
Page 46
Page 47
Page 48
Page 49
Page 50
Page 51
Page 52
Page 53
Page 54
Page 55
Page 56
Page 57
Page 58
Page 59
Page 60
Page 61
Page 62
Page 63
Page 64
Page 65
Page 66
Page 67
Page 68
Page 69
Page 70
Page 71
Page 72
Page 73
Page 74
Page 75
Page 76
Page 77
Page 78
Page 79
Page 80
Page 81
Page 82
Page 83
Page 84
Page 85
Page 86
Page 87
Page 88
Page 89
Page 90
Page 91
Page 92
Page 93
Page 94
Page 95
Page 96
Page 97
Page 98
Page 99
Page 100
Page 101
Page 102
Page 103
Page 104
Page 105
Page 106
Page 107
Page 108
Page 109
Page 110
Page 111
Page 112
Page 113
Page 114
Page 115
Page 116
Page 117
Page 118
Page 119
Page 120
Page 121
Page 122
Page 123
Page 124
Page 125
Page 126
Page 127
Page 128
Page 129
Page 130
Page 131
Page 132
Page 133
Page 134
Page 135
Page 136
Page 137
Page 138
Page 139
Page 140
Page 141
Page 142
Page 143
Page 144
Page 145
Page 146
Page 147
Page 148
Page 149
Page 150
Page 151
Page 152
Page 153
Page 154
Page 155
Page 156
Page 157
Page 158
Page 159
Page 160

x

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga

Direct Links

If you want to link to this newspaper/magazine, please use these links:

Link to this newspaper/magazine: Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga
https://timarit.is/publication/895

Link to this issue:

Link to this page:

Link to this article:

Please do not link directly to images or PDFs on Timarit.is as such URLs may change without warning. Please use the URLs provided above for linking to the website.