W
Warrenton
Guest
This goes to the ‘neo’ in Neopaganism…For modern Pagans, we try to consider the ‘virtues’ of the various ways of life. … We teach ourselves that in modern times we must each be our own druid, our own guardian, our own provider. We find that the gods like to see our striving, and we do our best to avoid turning it into strife.
Thank you for this explanation. It raises a question that is similar to the one I just put to Brenna: to what extent is the old paganism the desideratum?
I will state readily that I like the old paganism. I like its sense of loyalty, propriety, honor. I can’t think of any European religions that did not have this, and one could include many of the American Indians and Shinto also. As to south Asian pagans, I don’t know much about them, but it would not surprise me if they shared them too, albeit in a less developed way.
But paganism underwent a change that I think can be traced even in its artifacts. When one reads Hesiod, or the Illiad, anyone attuned to art at all is struck by the freshness of these works. They are nigh three thousand years old, but seem to have been written yesterday. The best Egyptian art gives the same sense.
By the time one arrives at Marcus Aurelius, or Lucretius even, the freshness is gone. They still throw people to the lions in the Coloseum, but they don’t believe it delights the lares or the genii of the illustrious dead. Some may differ, but one gets a similar feeling of ennui in some passages of Beowulf and other Anglo Saxon poems. The Icelandic chronicles of the foundation of the community (someone help me with the title!!!) are interesting - indeed, addicting - like the Archers with weapons - but the society is noticeably “joyless.” I don’t mean miserable, or wretched, but there is nothing remotely like the spirit one finds in the Canterbury Tales. Something happened.
Do pagans recognise what I’m trying to describe, and if so, how do pagans propose to “breath the life” back into the people?