Emily Dickinson once compared herself to being like a Robin
in “humble circumstance.” Emily felt
small and unknown. With only several of her poems published in her lifetime, she
never achieved status, renown, or popularity.
Was this lack of status Emily’s choice? Was it her destiny? What is interesting is that captured in
Emily’s poetry is the belief that the angels had something to do with her lack
of status and her humble circumstance. She projected this belief to the Robins
she saw in her garden when she wrote, “Angels have a modest way to screen
robins (and apparently her) from renown.”
Whether this is true or not, it seems that Emily felt as though the
angels were screening her. Did some
angel conspire with her in some manner offering to guard her from gaining
popularity? Did the angel screen her
from becoming a renowned poet in her lifetime? Was this the price or sacrifice asked of her,
and/or that she demanded of herself, that would allow her to remain in a place of
humble circumstance, and perhaps the only place she would be able deliver her deepest
and most passionate poetry to the world? Certainly, Emily would not be the
first gifted individual who felt the need to remain free from the limelight.
Did Emily genuinely fear that popularity would spoil her and
take something away from her message? Did the angel, perhaps her guardian
angel, continually warn her, screen her, protect her, and sustain her in her
solitude and innermost being, so she could live an austere life writing her
poems? Or, was she simply neurotic as
can be true of many gifted artists?
What about us? What about us more down to earth, common
folks who will most likely not leave behind a profound legacy in any form. Can an
ordinary individual such as me still have a similar experience of feeling
screened away from most of society to protect and enrich my unique life
message? Or, am I neurotic and crazed with a special touch of vanity? Perhaps if someday I can leave a humble legacy
that speaks to even only a few people, is that not of infinite value to society.
Emily also said, “If I can stop one heart from breaking, I shall not live in
vain. . . or help one fainting robin Unto his nest again, I shall not live in
vain.”
I know my humble life as a fly fishing guide is not worthy
of being considered renown in any manner, yet, when I read Emily’s prose and
her life story, and consider my life experiences, I wonder if in some small way,
I’ve been screened from success and recognition. How could I as a child fishing
alone at a pond and teaching myself to fly fish think all that highly of myself
when there was no one around to validate or recognize me? There were no
pictures; no handshakes or ‘high fives’ when I landed fish. And, certainly
nothing was ever posted on the internet for everyone to see.
I often felt that in the few areas of life where I achieved a certain level of success; fly-fishing being one of them, the level of achievement and what I truly had to share, came about because of my lack of popularity in mainstream culture and from a feeling of remaining in humble circumstance. I rarely felt highly successful (there is always someone of greater renown and catches bigger and more fish!), and perhaps, this humble awareness was the only place I felt comfortable. So, in the end, what I have to leave others, (if I have anything to leave at all?), is the humble solitary path I once walked to the pond.
Yet, in spite of this humble path, I realize I have done my
share of boasting and feeling proud of certain achievements. And I know I often
tried to find paths that gave me recognition. Yet, mysteriously, there were
limits, a type of screening and sometimes, things seemed even to back fire.
Even while successful, there was often a sense that I would not be able to feel
too highly of myself, because if I were honest with myself, I had to admit that
at times I was simply lucky?
All too often, it seemed that life events tumbled down the
river. While gazing off, suddenly a fish
found itself on the end of my line (and I knew it was not my talent as an
angler). Or, while feeling proud of how well I was fishing, the currents suddenly
knocked me off my feet into a hole and I know I looked quite silly. It seemed that just when I may have thought I
was the best at something such as in fly-fishing, or any number of endeavors, something
would happen that would cause me to fall back into humble circumstance.
Sometimes, while feeling grandiose, and stalking a fish, I lost my balance and literally
fell backwards in the river. Did the angels have their way of screening me and laugh? Did the angels have a way with the fish and laugh at me? Did both fish and angel work together to keep
me in humble circumstance? I doubt such falls from our hubris are posted for our fans to see.
Like many fly-fishers, sometimes I can hook fish after fish
and I enjoy showing off. It is hard to
feel of humble circumstance while actively successful in fly-fishing and
everyone is asking, “What are you using?”
Yet, I fail to tell the whole story.
Often there was some other angler across the river, (who I did not want
to notice), who was doing just as well; or even better than I was. Or, the next day I might return to the same
spot in hope of repeating the performance only to learn the fish will not touch
anything I cast. I try every fly and
technique but nothing works. I try even harder but I cannot turn a fish. Something
seems to “screen me” and I fall back into “humble circumstance.” I realize that on any given day, anyone,
including the fish, can out fish me. Being a renowned fly fisher is only an
illusion inside my own head.
If this is true, that angels, or life or what we call God,
has anything to do with screening me from renown, then I ask why this might be
important. Surely, God has better things to do than to keep me humble. At the very least, for me, if I am going to
view myself of being of humble circumstance (which is not easy to do in this
culture, since it wants to make everyone popular! ), then in that lowly place, I might learn to pay
attention to some of the deeper currents of my life. If I can come down from
the high place from which I often cast and learn to pay attention to the “bigger”
life around me, and of others, then, I might truly learn to live in humble
circumstance. Then and only then, I shall not live in vain.
If our lives are a story, song, or poem for others, then
from that place of more humble circumstance I might deliver my best life poetry,
offering up the best parts of my life story, and be able to make the best casts
to fish and people in my life.
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