My neighbors, you remember the dawn of youth with pleasure and regret
its passing; but I remember it like a prisoner who recalls the bars and
shackles of his jail. You speak of those years between infancy and youth
as a golden era free from confinement and cares, but I call those years
an era of silent sorrow which dropped as a seed into my heart and grew
with it and could find no outlet to the world of Knowledge and wisdom
until love came and opened the heart's doors and lighted its corners.
Love provided me with a tongue and tears. You people remember the
gardens and orchids and the meeting places and street corners that
witnessed your games and heard your innocent whispering; and I remember,
too, the beautiful spot in North Lebanon. Every time I close my eyes I
see those valleys full of magic and dignity and those mountains covered
with glory and greatness trying to reach the sky. Every time I shut my
ears to the clamor of the city I hear the murmur of the rivulets and the
rustling of the branches. All those beauties which I speak of now and
which I long to see, as a child longs for his mother's breast, wounded
my spirit, imprisoned in the darkness of youth, as a falcon suffers in
its cage when it sees a flock of birds flying freely in the spacious
sky. Those valleys and hills fired my imagination, but bitter thoughts
wove round my heart a net of hopelessness.
Every time I went to the fields I returned disappointed, without
understanding the cause of my disappointment. Every time I looked at the
gray sky I felt my heart contract. Every time I heard the singing of
the birds and babbling of the spring I suffered without understanding
the reason for my suffering. It is said that unsophistication makes a
man empty and that emptiness makes him carefree. It may be true among
those who were born dead and who exist like frozen corpses; but the
sensitive boy who feels much and knows little is the most unfortunate
creature under the sun, because he is torn by two forces. The first
force elevates him and shows him the beauty of existence through a cloud
of dreams; the second ties him down to the earth and fills his eyes
with dust and overpowers him with fears and darkness.Solitude has soft, silky hands, but with strong fingers it grasps the heart and makes it ache with sorrow. Solitude is the ally of sorrow as well as a companion of spiritual exaltation.
The boy's soul undergoing the buffeting of sorrow is like a white lily just unfolding. It trembles before the breeze and opens its heart to daybreak and folds its leaves back when the shadow of night comes. If that boy does not have diversion or friends or companions in his games his life will be like a narrow prison in which he sees nothing but spiderwebs and hears nothing but the crawling of insects.
That sorrow which obsessed me during my youth was not caused by lack of amusement, because I could have had it; neither from lack of friends, because I could have found them. That sorrow was caused by an inward ailment which made me love solitude. It killed in me the inclination for games and amusement. It removed from my shoulders the wings of youth and made me like a pong of water between mountains which reflects in its calm surface the shadows of ghosts and the colors of clouds and trees, but cannot find an outlet by which to pass singing to the sea.
Thus was my life before I attained the age of eighteen. That year is like a mountain peak in my life, for it awakened knowledge in me and made me understand the vicissitudes of mankind. In that year I was reborn and unless a person is born again his life will remain like a blank sheet in the book of existence. In that year, I saw the angels of heaven looking at me through the eyes of a beautiful woman. I also saw the devils of hell raging in the heart of an evil man. He who does not see the angels and devils in the beauty and malice of life will be far removed from knowledge, and his spirit will be empty of affection.
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