Thursday, June 20, 2013

Chapter 4


 
 
Once again we find Dorothy and Toto on the road. Carrying her suitcase, Dorothy crosses a small bridge that spans a gulch as the next scene opens. But an unusual wagon sits in the small ravine and intrigued she reads the words emblazoned on its side:

PROFESSOR

MARVEL

ACCLAIMED BY

The CROWNED HEADS OF EUROPE

The correlation between the wagon’s advertisement and the crowned figures found in the Rosarium is difficult to ignore. As with the previous image, this woodcut adds another element to the royal couple. The crowned-couple continue to hold mirror images as they offer their flowers with opposing hands. But now they have immersed partially into a hexagonal vessel. In his interpretation of the Rosarium series, Adam McLean asserts this image represents the beginning of the seeker’s 7-stage effort to attain alchemy’s first goal – the acquisition of the White Stone.

A similar initiation can be seen in Dorothy’s tale. Not only has Dorothy taken to the road once again but this time she carries basket as well as her suitcase. Smaller than the basket that temporarily held Toto prisoner, Dorothy’s container will, nevertheless, become a near-constant accessory as her journey progresses. While the basket Miss Gulch used may represent the Pali canon laws aimed at the good of the community, or sangha, Dorothy’s smaller basket could signify a different set of laws designed to help the individual.

At this point in the spiritual seeker’s journey it is likely that she is neither schooled in the philosophy or metaphysics of any spiritual discipline nor is she likely to be a rote-master of any teachings, Buddhist or otherwise. Buddha is not mentioned in the movie and it appears Dorothy’s basket, if it is to follow the Theravadic symbolism, must be applied to another line of perennial philosophy’s teachings.

While Christianity is noted in the previous scene, mention is made in this part of Dorothy’s journey of Egyptian ‘priests’. The bearer of this reference is a man Dorothy and Toto discover as they descend into the gulch. Dressed in fancy yet worn clothing, the stranger appears innocuous as he roasts his dinner over an open campfire. In order to uphold the claims painted on his wagon the man professes to read minds.  Guessing wrongly as to Dorothy’s mission, the amateur psychic finally deduces that she is running away. It is clear to the audience that no matter his artful claims, Professor Marvel is hardly a master at his craft.

But Dorothy gives him her full trust and follows after the charlatan as he invites her to enter his gypsy wagon. Inside, the center of focus is a crystal ball. The counterfeiter continues his theatrics, lighting a candle and placing a turban on his head. Maintaining the authenticity of the crystal ball, he presents the ball as being “…used by the Priests of Isis and Osiris in the days of the Pharaohs of Egypt.” [1]

While Buddhism is a great source of wisdom for perennial philosophy in the East, in the West the religion of ancient Egypt heads the list of contributors. The myth of its famed god and goddess, Osiris and Isis, is seen as one of the first hero journeys in recorded history. In the ancient myth, Osiris is killed by his younger brother Set, who tricks his brother into entering a sarcophagus that fits his frame perfectly. Seventy-two attendants rush in, “clamp the lid, wrap iron bands around it and throw it into the Nile”[2] The journey down the river Nile ends in Syria where a tree grows around the washed-ashore sarcophagus.

In the journey to find her deceased husband, Isis comes to the place in Syria where the tree has grown and is now used as a majestic pillar in the king’s palace. As Isis sits by a well within the palace, she is invited to nurse the newborn prince. Isis not only nurses the boy from her little finger but she also recites charms. As she lays him in the fireplace each night as a way to burn off his mortality she takes on the form of a swallow. One night the prince’s mother discovers this scene. Screaming when she sees her son in the fire, she breaks the spell and the goddess returns to her nursemaid form. Yet Isis explains her situation with such lucidity that the king releases her of wrongdoing and gives her the pillar that houses Osiris.

The importance of purifying fire in this ancient myth provides a link to this point in Dorothy’s journey. Warming his supper over an open fire, Professor Marvel is the only Kansas character connected with this central ingredient found in myth, religion and fairy tales. Yet fire is also central in the Rosarium text as it depicts the nature of the famed Philosopher’s Stone. The father of Western alchemy, Hermes Trismegistus, is given credit for the Rosarium quote, “Stone is fire…”[3] and fire continues to be used in key episodes that follow in Dorothy’s tale.

Although fire has purifying tendencies, those beginning the alchemical process are cautioned to start with a “soft fire.”[4]  Taking fire and using it only for utilitarian purposes, as Professor Marvel is doing, may be interpreted as symbolizing the alchemical soft fire. The Rosarium also credits Hermes’‘Fourth Book of Treatises’ and counsels that alchemists “repel the vice of arrogancy …[and] become virtuous and honest.”[5] Although he could represent alchemy’s keeper of the fire, Professor Marvel fails in upholding this important requirement of alchemy and its secrets.

The professor’s chicanery continues as he directs Dorothy to close her eyes. Following his direction with absolute trust, the girl fails to see the imposter rifle through her basket. Examining a photo that is soon replaced in its basket-home, the pseudo-fortuneteller asks Dorothy to open her eyes once again. As he simply relates objects he has just reviewed, the professor’s ability to accurately describe her Kansas home is a thing of wonder in Dorothy’s gullible perception.

Yet the same sense of wonder eludes her deceiver. Like Uncle Henry, Professor Marvel does not live up to his name. Life appears rather boring and predictable. But in enthusiastically asking Dorothy if she knows any crowned heads of Europe a different, a more childlike aspect of the charlatan emerges. One of the main characteristics of an alchemist, or anyone deliberately undertaking the journey of perennial philosophy, is an open mind and questioning spirit. The true alchemist searches the most mundane and commonplace in their world and discovers the wonder at its depth.

That Professor Marvel generally holds no sense of wonder is evident in his treatment of his campfire. The ‘gift of the gods’, fire is reduced to nothing more than a utilitarian purpose in the eyes of the pseudo-conjurer. The same holds true for the lowly draft-horse Professor Marvel addresses at scene’s end. But it is in the horse’s name, Sylvester, that esoteric possibilities can be seen as just out of reach.

Western perennial philosophy suffered a period of near-cessation during the centuries following the fall of the Roman Empire in fifth century AD. Yet Roman law also dealt harshly with the esoteric philosophy as it outlawed centuries-old Eleusinian Mystery initiations. These ceremonies, important for thousands of followers of Isis and the religious conviction of symbolic death and rebirth, became clandestine during the Empire’s final centuries while a rise of orthodox Christianity took hold during this same period. But even the teachings of Christian theologist Augustine, heavily influenced by neoplatonic philosophy, suffered when the Roman Empire fell to conquerors from northern Europe. 

Yet while the Western Roman Empire suffered a stunted period of cultural progress, the Eastern Empire continued to flower in arts, science and culture. The eastern Empire, also known as the Byzatine Empire, had its capital in Constantinople. In the ten centuries following the collapse of  the Western Roman Empire, the Byzantine gained, lost and regained northern Africa, Italy and western areas of the Mediterranean. Although given scarce credit by many non-historians, this empire would later become the all-important link between western Europe and its all-but-lost connection to the earlier wisdom of Greece and Egypt.

Before the crusades had obliterated Muslim communities, Arabic communities of the Byzantine empire sat next to their Christian neighbors in peace. Especially in Spain, the Arabic influence flourished and studies long dead in other parts of Europe found students from other lands eager to learn this new knowledge.

It was in the boundary area of Christian/Muslim influence that a poor young man from rural France began a dedicated education that would eventually lead him to the halls of Emperor Otto. Schooled early on in Barcelona in the shadow of Arabic learning institutions, the gifted Gerbert of Aurillac (c.940-1003) caught the attention of Emperor Otto I. Starting with the position of tutor to Otto II, Gerbert rose in rank and went to Reims in northern France to finish his education. As later instructor at the cathedral school Gerbert shared mathematics and other Arabic studies. By the year 999AD Archbishop Gerbert of Aurillac was made Pope Sylvester II, a post appointed him by Emperor Otto. Although pope for less than three years, Sylvester II, considered ‘the most learned man in Europe’[6] helped the Christian world started a new millennium.

 Excelling in little known studies, Gerbert taught the mathematics of harmonics in Reims and is credited later with helping to ‘introduce Arabic numerals to the West’.[7] With the attainment of remarkable knowledge in mathematics, Gerbert also excelled in astronomy. He is credited with writing a manual for the newly-introduced astrolabe, a contrivance allowing its’ user the rare ability to tell time from the position of stars and planets. Astronomy so enthralled Gerber that he spent a great deal of time and energy drawing models of the universe on horsehides. He would later use these models as barter to acquire rare manuscripts.

            Gerbert’s use of horsehide as canvas for his models of the universe is noteworthy as this drastic-utilitarian use of horses held the only means Gerbert had to increase ownership of important manuscripts. Yet it is highly unlikely that Professor Marvel would know the significance of horses in this pope’s life as Sylvester II, although highly-intelligent ,was not very influential in the papal line. However, his reputation during and immediately after his meteoric rise from rural poverty to pope led to speculations “that Arabian alchemists had taught him forbidden arts.” [8] Sylvester’s high intelligence and Arabic influence may have been strong contributions in the naming of the professor’s unassuming draft-horse. If the draft horse is to live up to achievements of the pope who shares his moniker, a much further process must take place.

In the Rosarium series, the process remains at its beginnings as the royal couple continue to proffer single-blossomed flowers in the fourth woodcut. But now the couple descends into a water-filled hexagonal vessel. McLean interprets this as “the realm of the unconscious” and points out that the vessel could be a repetition of the first woodcut’s “Mercurial Fountain”[9] The water of this process is given many attributes in the Rosarium text, most notably, “It is the water which killeth and reviveth. It is the water which burneth and maketh hot.”[10]  Whether mercury or water, immersion in liquid remains central in twelve of the next fourteen woodcuts and may indicate alchemy’s Mercury of the Soul to represent one of the most important ingredients of the journey.

There is no water to be found at this point in Dorothy’s story, simply a dried up gully. But water found in other stories often takes the form of a journey’s mode of transportation as in traveling the river Nile or Odysseus’ sea journey. Dorothy’s journey, however, is on a man-made road. Roads began replacing water travel in depicting the mythic journey even before the time of Chaucer. In land-locked Kansas travel along a road seems an obvious choice.      

Yet Dorothy is anything but certain she wants to continue her journey after receiving disturbing news from Professor Marvel’s crystal ball reading. After impressing the gullible Dorothy by underhanded means, the professor continues his wily ways and begins to weave a story using his crystal as a viewing chamber. A ‘careworn’ woman is described and Dorothy identifies her Auntie Em. The professor contrives that the woman is falling onto her bed after clutching her heart. No more is learned of Auntie Em’s health as the faker announces the crystal has darkened, leaving the rest of the story to Dorothy’s imagination.

Dorothy’s concern for the well-being of her beloved aunt overrides her desire to continue her journey to faraway places. This reversal could be seen as a correlation between Dorothy’s story and the partial submersion into the Rosarium vessel. While the following woodcuts depict the couple’s full submersion, the partial submersion found in woodcut four may represent hesitancy.  And indeed, at this point in an individual’s spiritual journey, the pull of familiar societal beliefs tugs just as strongly as curiosity of new and undiscovered lands.

The familiar realm for Dorothy was also familiar ground for much of the movie’s original viewing audience. The cultural norm of Christianity with its stabilizing commandments and its fundamental stance of belief in a savior providing the avenue of eternal salvation would appeal to many movie-goers in American theaters in 1939. Looking to a savior, whether an individual or a governing system, is typical of the earlier stance in the journey of looking outside oneself for stability and happiness. Perhaps at this wavering point the new journeyman believes the earlier betrayal that seemed so unacceptable can now be swallowed and a return to a predictable life would be the next best move.

Dorothy runs from the new world of the professor and his unfamiliar ways choosing to return to the familiar realm of Auntie Em. But before she crosses the bridge to retrace her road journey, she bends down and speaks to Toto. Summarizing her predicament, Dorothy reasons,  “Oh what’ll I do? If we go home, they’ll send you to the Sheriff. And if we don’t, Auntie Em may—well, she may die! I know what I’ll do—I’ll give you to Hunk. He’ll watch out for you.” 

This sound judgment by Dorothy is not found in the final released version of the 1939 film, the only film version available to its billions of viewers. These few seconds of edited dialogue accumulated as more and more of the film's original 140-minute version was cut away in the few weeks after the movie's first release. With more than forty minutes of the movie taken out, retrievable through scripts found on the Internet, one wonders why this entrancing movie suffered such drastic editing. Although a few theories have surfaced to answer this mystery perhaps the timing of the initial release provides the best answer.

Despite the tremendous pre-release hype Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer provided across the country, fewer people attended theaters during the last week of August, 1939 because more riveting news came through home radios. The world had been listening as to what Nazi Germany would do next in their push toward war. That week radios broadcasted the alarming news that Germany had invaded Poland. Lower attendance at the box office may have had nothing to do with audiences enjoying the film or not. But the film’s producers made decisions as if the quality of the film was the only factor.

What is lost in this scene as a result of drastic editing can be deemed quite important. Dorothy finds clarity as she makes the decision to return to her familiar surroundings. Leaving Toto with the farmhand, Hunk, seems quite sensible. Hunk provided sound advice earlier and may now be able to provide safe-keeping for Toto. Yet Dorothy is still taking a chance. Whether Toto remains safe with Hunk or is taken away by the Law, Dorothy is ready to relinquish ownership of her cherished dog.

And so it could be for the spiritual seeker during this first breaking away from the cultural norm of home. As Dorothy decides to return to her familiar home, so the seeker may also find this new process toward development too unsettling and choose to return to a more predictable realm. Although the Rosarium states that their process of development is “the universal way…easy and rare”, staying within the cultural limits offers less of a challenge at this point of the journey.

Dorothy is choosing what the alchemists describe “the second way” when she makes the decision to return to the Gale homestead. Alchemists see this particualr way as “very hard and laboursome.”[11] There remains an artificiality in the way of the cultural norm and alchemists see their art as “more natural.” Despite its universality, however, much care is made to conceal the secret of alchemy’s way. Whether it is buried beneath volumes of arcane symbolism or hidden within gibberish, such as spoken by Professor Marvel as he spins off about Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, and Marc Anthony, gold nuggets of wisdom can still be unearthed with a little patience and the eye or ear that takes nothing for granted.

            This is a fortunate age where edited film scripts can still be retrieved. The same retrievals can be found of once-lost books of many religions. Many view the lost-books as new pathways of spiritual development, rare but easy. However, the pull of the religion of birth may provide the seeker with a stronger desire to belong than to discover. But a destiny, beyond the particular yet artificial way, may decide the seeker’s future. And the wisdom found within a simple tale may give us the direction needed to put this new-found, yet ancient knowledge, to its best use.  

 

 



[1] Original Wizard of Oz script http://sfy.ru/?script=wizard_of_oz_1939

[2] Joseph Campbell Transformations of Myth Through Time p82

[3] The Rosary of the Philosophers p111

[4] Ibid p15

[5] Ibid p24

[6] James Hannam God’s Philosophers p25

[7] Ibid p28

[8] Ibid p30

[9] The Rosary of the Philosophers p123

[10] Ibid p15

[11] Ibid p11

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