Wednesday, February 13, 2008

In Praise of Melancholy


The gene pool — before and beyond time — froths and sloshes. What flops up onto the temporal shores is a matter of chance, a product of the waves' whims. At some point this teeming reservoir of DNA spumes forth a saturnine gene, a double helix destined to produce melancholy dispositions. From this instant onward what we know as human history begins: that striving, seemingly endless, toward an ungraspable perfection, that tragic effort to reach what exceeds the grasp, to fail magnificently. This gene, this melancholy gene, has proved the code for innovation. It has produced over the centuries our resplendent towers, yearning heavenward. It has created our great epics, god-hungry. It has concocted our memorable symphonies, as tumultuously beautiful as the first ocean. Without this sorrowful genome, these sublimities would have remained in the netherworld of nonexistence. Indeed, without this genetic information, sullen and ambitious, what we see as culture in general, that empyreal realm of straining ideas, might have never arisen from the mere quest for survival, from simple killing and eating.

3 comments:

Arelcao Akleos said...

No Melancholia, No Hamlet.....just tons and tons of "Green Eggs and Ham"

My Frontier Thesis said...

I'm happy to say that I enjoy my melancholy and was always suspicious of green eggs and ham.

My Frontier Thesis said...

More on Melancholy and America's obsession with happiness.