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| WHAT OTHERS
ARE SAYING
(or, somebody who's caught what I'm "after
doing," as
the Irish say)
"I
believe Coulombe’s writings are worth a slightly
deeper reading. I’m not saying it won’t
require a certain intellectual leap, but I believe
what Coulombe has asserted in some of his articles
is not that there is an “occult influence”
in Tolkien’s work -but rather- that it is
informed by an underlying “world-view”
(born of Neo-Platonism) -a philosophical paradigm
shared by many writers, poets, artists, and religious-
not the least of which being “such Neoplatonic
Church Fathers as St. Dionysius the Areopagite,
St. Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and St. Augustine...
Ultra-Realist scholastics such as John Scotus Eriugena,
Pope Sylvester II, William of Auvergne, Roger Bacon,
Bl. Raymond Lully, St. Bonaventure, and St. Albertus
Magnus...” (Coulombe)
The Neo-Platonic also happened to be the philosophical
springboard for lots of heretical and occult movements
(whose members included many artists and poets),
starting from the time of the renaissance “Rosicrucian”
craze. So, that’s the “link,”
if you will. Does this mean a traditional Catholic
author (Tolkien) is somehow “infected”
by association via a shared world-view with european
metaphysicians?
Coulombe has coined a term for Neo-Platonism’s
expression in art and literature as the workings
of the “Hermetic Imagination.” It’s
his term, and I think he probably thought it sounded
just provocative enough to spark discussions such
as these. Coulombe, we must remember, is a professional
writer -and if he’s a “Knight”
of anything, it’s simply the Order of St.
Sylvester. He likes to write on lots of different
topics. If you don’t like his writing style,
think his knowledge of history is weak, his grasp
of Catholic theology faulty -or worse- subversive,
don’t buy his books. For myself, I quite enjoy
him. Though, maybe I’m suffering from Coulombitis?
I like to think of Coulombe’s “Hermetic
Imagination” like this: We go into a movie
theater (let’s say, to see The Return of the
King). We get comfy in our seats. We start to relax.
As the lights go down, thoughts of the outside world,
our troubles, etc., start to fade. We know that,
for a time, we have leave to enter another world
(in this case, film) in which reality as we know
it is suspended. It is a world that operates on
another, deeper and more subtle, level of mind.
Thanks to this ‘magical’ shift in environment,
we effortlessly slip into a whole new set of rules
governing “reality,” where anything
can happen. It is, as C.S. Lewis held fantasy literature
to be, an “objective dimension.” When
the lights come back up, we’re back from (what
was hopefully) a satisfactory “magical”
journey.
In this (admittedly weak) metaphor, I equated the
Hermetic Imagination with the effect of the darkened,
plush, old-fashioned, movie theater as a functioning
crossroads between worlds. When we abandon the approach
of the Hermetic Imagination, we are left with something
roughly equivalent to watching a DVD in a brightly
lit, bare, room with no chairs, filled with an audience
of popcorn throwing jibber-jabbers. There is no
“escape” into the film because no one
cares to go. There is nothing to facilitate the
experience, and no recognition of that other world
as worth one’s fully entranced attention.
But the point where my metaphor breaks down is that
in Neo-Platonist thought, the “film”
is the primary reality -the supernatural realm where
exist Heaven, the Saints, Purgatory, angels, spirits,
demons, and Hell- not the theater (or worse, the
parking lot). Where Neo-platonism meets art, writers
like Tolkien become (to beat my metaphor to death)
like filmmakers. I believe, as Tolkien describes
it, “sub-creators.” Tolkien: "the
artist is a creator working in exactly the same
way as God the Creator works; the artist becomes
a mini-creator, his world a sub-created world reflecting
God's creation." It’s not that Tolkein’s
works are “allegories” of the gospels,
but rather narratives happening in a self-contained
world of his creation, based on Catholic principles.
Sounds pretty Neo-Platonist to me.
So, what are we left with in this discussion? It
seems, perhaps, not so much a matter of ‘occult
subversion’ or ‘kabbalistic’ contamination
(whatever exactly that is?) on the part of Coulombe,
but a reaction to a coined term (Hermetic Imagination)
which not too surprisingly raises the hackles of
some who have apprehensions about broaching a subject
matter it would seem many of our Church Fathers
fostered.
Is this a fair assessment?"
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2004
© Charles Coulombe
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